Glomerular filtration rate (GFR), urine flow (UV), renal tubular transport maximum for glucose (TMG), and single nephron glomerular filtration rate (SNGFR), determined in anesthetized norepinephrine-infused trout (Salmo gairdneri), were 18.51 +/- 5.78 microliter x min-1 x kg body wt-1, 5.31 +/- 1.38 microliter x min-1 x kg body wt-1, 105.21 +/- 46.84 microgram x min-1 x kg body wt-1, and 3.74 +/- 1.12 nl/min, respectively, when in seawater (SW) and 140.39 +/- 17.24, 76.38 +/- 10.41, 626.16 +/- 77.46, and 1.31 +/- 0.20 in freshwater (FW). Angiotensin II infusions, to reduce UV, GFR, and TMG by 50%, had no effect on the average SNGFR of FW trout, but reduced that of SW fish to 1.42 +/- 0.19 nl/min. Infusions of 20% ferrocyanide, visualized as Prussian blue (PB), identified three glomerular populations: filtering (F) with PB in glomerular vessels and tubular lumen; nonfiltering (NF)--PB in glomerular vessels only; nonperfused (NP)--no PB associated with the nephron. SW and FW kidneys contained about 40% NF tubules. In FW, 45% were F tubules compared with 5% in SW, whereas NP tubules comprised 51% of SW tubules and 13% of FW. During angiotensin II infusions the distributions were 9% and 46% NF in FW and 6% F and 12% NF in SW trout.
Summary
The potential for participation of the arginine‐nitric oxide system in the aetiology of acute equine laminitis has been assessed. Nitric oxide (NO), produced by the action of NO synthase (NOS) on its substrate l‐arginine, relaxes vascular smooth muscle to cause vasodilatation. An attenuated normal vasodilatory tone may characterise the pathogenesis of acute equine laminitis. An intravenous infusion of 10%l‐arginine in 0.9% saline caused vasodilatation in the hoof of a normal pony and immediate reperfusion of laminal tissues in an acutely laminitic pony, detected noninvasively by near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), but the amino acid had little effect on systemic blood pressure. Treatment of acute laminitis with glyceryl trinitrate applied topically to the pasterns reduced the typical ‘bounding pulses’ in treated limbs, reduced lameness and lowered systemic blood pressure. Nitric oxide is likely to participate in the multifactorial pathogenesis of equine laminitis.
Peripheral plasma concentrations, metabolic clearance rates (MCR) and blood production rates (BPR) of 1 alpha-hydroxycorticosterone (1-OH-B) were determined in female dogfish (Scyliorhinus canicula) under varying environmental conditions. The constant-infusion technique, using high specific activity tritiated 1-OH-B, was applied to measure the MCR, and BPR were derived from the product of plasma concentration and MCR at equilibrium. Urea plasma clearances and apparent BPR were assessed in a similar manner. Fish were adapted stepwise to 140, 120, 90, 80, 70, 60 and 50% normal sea water (about 1000 mosmol/l). In all cases 1-OH-B was the major corticosteroid, cortisol and corticosterone were sought but never detected. In environments of reduced osmolarity, plasma osmolarity, sodium, chloride and urea concentrations all declined, alongside increases in plasma concentrations, MCR and BPR of 1-OH-B. In fish held in environments at concentrations greater than normal sea water, plasma osmolarity, sodium, chloride and urea concentrations all increased. Plasma clearance of urea increased in fish held in environments more dilute than sea water, while it decreased in the more hyperosmotic waters. It is tentatively concluded that homeostasis of plasma composition, with particular respect to urea, is in part regulated by 1-OH-B in the dogfish.
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