The purpose of the present study was to analyze the changes in blood pressure, left ventricular (LV) wall thickness and LV systolic function of aged spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs) either with or without antihypertensive therapy. Twenty-one SHRs aged 60.5±0.25 weeks were investigated over 22 weeks. They were divided into the following three groups (7 per group): untreated controls (CTRL), treatment with captopril (CAP, 60 mg kg(-1) daily) and treatment with captopril plus nifedipine (CAP+NIF, 60+10 mg kg(-1) daily). Systolic blood pressure (SBP) was regularly measured using the tail cuff method, and an echocardiogram was repeatedly obtained to examine the LV systolic and diastolic area, LV systolic fractional area change, cardiac output and LV myocardial wall thickness. Finally, heart catheterization was performed. While SBP remained stable in the CTRL animals over the experimental period, both of the antihypertensive treatments significantly reduced SBP by 20% in the treated animals (P<0.001). Echocardiography demonstrated that both the systolic and the diastolic LV function of the untreated SHRs deteriorated over time, whereas both types of antihypertensive treatments attenuated and delayed but did not completely prevent the decline in LV systolic function. Cardiac output, as determined by pulsed wave Doppler echocardiography, remained significantly higher in the treated animals than in CTRLs until week 20, but it then decreased. Heart catheterization showed a significant decrease in LV function, as reflected by the LV systolic pressure and contractility, in the CTRLs but not in treated animals. These findings clearly indicate that late-onset antihypertensive treatment with CAP or CAP+NIF is beneficial with respect to blood pressure reduction, LV hypertrophy attenuation and LV systolic function preservation.
A computer-based system for acquiring and analyzing physiological signals (ECG, heart rate, systemic arterial pressure, and forearm volume) was developed.This system is used to assess the effect of dietary sodium and calcium manipulations on forearm blood flow and vascular resistance (derived from arterial pressure and forearm volume changes during brief venous occlusion) during response to autonomic stimuli (cold pressor, handgrip, mental stress, reactive hyperemia) and adrenergic agonists (isoproterenol and phenylephrine).Results from seven baseline studies prior to dietary change indicate that data acquisition is rapid and precise.
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