Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Medicine, St George Hospital, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Abstract
Abstract
In this study we examined whether
l
-arginine treatment could prevent corticotropin (ACTH)–induced increases in blood pressure in the Sprague-Dawley rat. Sixty rats were randomly divided into six groups (n=10): sham injection, ACTH injection (0.5 mg/kg per day in divided doses),
l
-arginine (0.6%) in food plus sham injection,
l
-arginine plus ACTH treatment,
d
-arginine (0.6%) in food plus sham injection, and
d
-arginine plus ACTH. Systolic pressure, water intake, urine volume, body weight, plasma and urinary electrolytes, and serum corticosterone concentrations were measured. ACTH increased systolic pressure (from 127±2 to 165±6 mm Hg,
P
<.001), water intake, and urine volume and decreased body weight.
l
-Arginine reduced ACTH-induced blood pressure rises (130±3 mm Hg,
P
<.001) but had no effect on blood pressure in sham-treated rats.
d
-Arginine did not affect blood pressure in sham-treated rats, and systolic pressure in
d
-arginine+ACTH–treated rats was similar to that of ACTH-treated rats.
l
-Arginine decreased serum corticosterone concentrations in sham-treated rats (424±43 versus 238±25 ng/mL,
P
<.01), but
d
-arginine had no effect. However, both drugs decreased serum corticosterone concentrations in ACTH-treated rats (1071±117 versus 739±95 and 695±72 ng/mL for
l
- and
d
-arginine, respectively; both
P
<.05). As
l
-arginine but not
d
-arginine prevented ACTH-induced increases in blood pressure in Sprague-Dawley rats and both
l
- and
d
-arginine reduced serum corticosterone concentrations in ACTH-treated rats, the effects of
l
-arginine in preventing ACTH-induced hypertension were not simply a consequence of decreased corticosterone secretion.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
68 articles.
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