Both renal and respiratory diseases are common with high mortality rate around the world. This study was the first to compare effects of two kidneys, one clip (2K1C) and one-kidney, one clip (1K1C) Goldblatt hypertension on right ventricular pressure during normal condition and mechanical ventilation with hypoxia gas. Male Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to control, 2K1C, or 1K1C groups. Twenty-eight days after the first surgery, animals were anesthetized, and femoral artery and vein, and right ventricle cannulated. Systemic arterial pressure and right ventricular systolic pressures (RVSP) were recorded during ventilation the animals with normoxic or hypoxic gas. RVSP in the 1K1C group was significantly more than the control and 2K1C groups during baseline conditions and ventilation the animals with hypoxic gas. Administration of antioxidant Trolox increased RVSP in the 1K1C and control groups compared with their baselines. Furthermore, there was no alteration in RVSP during hypoxia in the presence of Trolox. This study indicated that RVSP only increased after 28 days induction of 1K1C but not 2K1C model. In addition, it seems that the response to hypoxic gas and antioxidants in 1K1C is more than 2K1C. These data also suggest that effects of 1K1C may partially be related to reactive oxygen species (ROS) pathways.
Besides its well-known actions on sensory afferents, eugenol also affects general excitability of the nervous system, but the mechanisms involved in the recent effect, especially through modulation of ion channels, have received much less attention. In this study, we studied the effects of eugenol on the excitability of central neurons of land snail Caucasotachea atrolabiata and tried to elucidate the underlying ionic mechanisms. The lower concentration of eugenol (0.5mM) reversibly reduced the frequency of spontaneous action potentials that was associated with elevation of threshold, reduction of maximum slope of rising phase and prolongation of actin potentials. These effects were mimicked by riluzole, suggesting that they might be mediated by inhibition of Na channels. Eugenol also prolonged the single-spike afterhyperpolarization and post stimulus inhibitory period, but these effects seemed to be consequent to action potential prolongation that indirectly augment Ca inward currents and Ca-activated K currents. This concentration of eugenol was also able to prevent or abolish pentylenetetrazole-induced epileptiform activity. On the other hand, a higher concentration of eugenol (2mM) reversibly increased the frequency of action potentials and then induced epileptiform activity in majority of treated neurons. Several criteria suggest that the inhibition of K channels by higher concentration of eugenol and indirect augmentation of Ca currents are central to the hyperexcitability and epileptiform activity induced by eugenol. Our findings indicate that while low concentration of eugenol could have antiepileptic properties, at higher concentration it induces epileptiform activity. It seems that does dependent inhibition of the ionic currents underlying rising and falling phases of action potential is relevant to the eugenol suppressant and excitatory actions, respectively.
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