Centrally mediated hyperactivity of the autonomic nervous system contributes to DOCA hypertension; however, the targeted peripheral vascular bed(s) remain unclear. We propose that if renal sympathetic activity is a factor in the development of DOCA-salt hypertension, then renal denervation (RDNX) should attenuate the hypertensive response. In protocol 1, uninephrectomized RDNX (n = 9) and sham-denervated (n = 6) Sprague-Dawley rats were allowed free access to 0.9% NaCl solution and 0.1% NaCl diet. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate were telemetrically recorded for 4 days before and 36 days after DOCA (100 mg/rat) implantation; sodium and water balances were recorded daily. Protocol 2 was similar except that saline intake in sham rats (n = 7) was matched to that observed in RDNX rats of protocol 1 for 30 days; for the last 10 days, the rats were allowed free access to saline. Before DOCA in protocol 1, MAP was lower (P < 0.05) in RDNX rats (99 +/- 1 mmHg) compared with sham rats (111 +/- 3 mmHg); however, heart rate and sodium and water balances were similar between groups. RDNX attenuated the MAP response to DOCA by approximately 50% (DeltaMAP = 22 +/- 3 mmHg, where Delta is change in MAP) when compared with sham rats (DeltaMAP = 38 +/- 6). RDNX rats consumed significantly less saline than sham rats, and cumulative sodium and water balances were reduced by 33% and 23%, respectively. In protocol 2, a similar pattern in MAP elevation was observed in RDNX and saline-restricted, sham-denervated rats even when saline restriction was removed. These results indicate that the renal sympathetic nerves are important in hypertension development but that other factors are also involved.
Arterial baroreceptor reflex control of renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) has been proposed to play a role in long-term control of arterial pressure. The hypothesis that the "set point" of the acute RSNA baroreflex curve determines the long-term level of arterial pressure is presented and challenged. Contrary to the hypothesis, studies on the long-term effects of sinoaortic denervation (SAD) on arterial pressure and RSNA, as well as more recent studies of chronic baroreceptor "unloading" on arterial pressure, suggest that the basal levels of sympathetic nerve activity and arterial pressure are regulated independent of arterial baroreceptor input to the brainstem. Studies of the effect of SAD on the long-term salt sensitivity of arterial pressure are consistent with a short-term role, rather than a long-term role for the arterial baroreceptor reflex in regulation of arterial pressure during changes in dietary salt intake. Renal denervation studies suggest that renal nerves contribute to maintenance of the basal levels of arterial pressure. However, evidence that baroreflex control of the kidney plays a role in the maintenance of arterial pressure during changes in dietary salt intake is lacking. It is proposed that a "baroreflex-independent" sympathetic control system must exist for the long-term regulation of sympathetic nerve activity and arterial pressure. The concept of a central nervous system "set point" for long-term control of mean arterial pressure (CNS-MAP set point), and its involvement in the pathogenesis of hypertension, is discussed.
A major goal of tissue engineering is the creation of pre-vascularized tissues that have a high density of organized microvessels that can be rapidly perfused following implantation. This is especially critical for highly metabolic tissues like myocardium, where a thick myocardial engineered tissue would require rapid perfusion within the first several days to survive transplantation. In the present work, tissue patches containing human microvessels that were either randomly oriented or aligned were placed acutely on rat hearts post-infarction and for each case it was determined whether rapid inosculation could occur and perfusion of the patch could be maintained for 6 days in an infarct environment. Patches containing self-assembled microvessels were formed by co-entrapment of human blood outgrowth endothelial cells and human pericytes in fibrin gel. Cell-induced gel contraction was mechanically-constrained resulting in samples with high densities of microvessels that were either randomly oriented (with 420±140 lumens/mm2) or uniaxially aligned (with 940±240 lumens/mm2) at the time of implantation. These patches were sutured onto the epicardial surface of the hearts of athymic rats following permanent ligation of the left anterior descending artery. In both aligned and randomly oriented microvessel patches, inosculation occurred and perfusion of the transplanted human microvessels was maintained, proving the in vivo vascularization potential of these engineered tissues. No difference was found in the number of human microvessels that were perfused in the randomly oriented (111±75 perfused lumens/mm2) and aligned (173±97 perfused lumens/mm2) patches. Our results demonstrate that tissue patches containing a high density of either aligned or randomly oriented human pre-formed microvessels achieve rapid perfusion in the myocardial infarct environment - a necessary first-step toward the creation of a thick, perfusable heart patch.
Kuroki MT, Guzman PA, Fink GD, Osborn JW. Time-dependent changes in autonomic control of splanchnic vascular resistance and heart rate in ANG II-salt hypertension. Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol 302: H763-H769, 2012. First published November 23, 2011 doi:10.1152/ajpheart.00930.2011.-Previous studies suggest that ANG II-induced hypertension in rats fed a high-salt (HS) diet (ANG II-salt hypertension) has a neurogenic component dependent on an enhanced sympathetic tone to the splanchnic veins and independent from changes in sympathetic nerve activity to the kidney or hind limb. The purpose of this study was to extend these findings and test whether altered autonomic control of splanchnic resistance arteries and the heart also contributes to the neurogenic component. Mean arterial pressure (MAP), heart rate (HR), superior mesenteric artery blood flow, and mesenteric vascular resistance (MVR) were measured during 4 control days, 14 days of ANG II delivered subcutaneously (150 ng · kg Ϫ1 · min Ϫ1 ), and 4 days of recovery in conscious rats fed a HS (2% NaCl) or low-salt (LS; 0.1% NaCl) diet. Autonomic effects on MAP, HR, and MVR were assessed by acute ganglionic blockade with hexamethonium (20 mg/kg iv) on day 3 of control, days 1,3,5,7,10, and 13 of ANG II, and day 4 of recovery. MVR increased during ANG II infusion in HS and LS rats but remained elevated only in HS rats. Additionally, the MVR response to hexamethonium was enhanced on days 10 and 13 of ANG II selectively in HS rats. Compared with LS rats, HR in HS rats was higher during the 2nd wk of ANG II, and its response to hexamethonium was greater on days 7, 10, and 13 of ANG II. These results suggest that ANG II-salt hypertension is associated with delayed changes in autonomic control of splanchnic resistance arteries and the heart. salt-sensitive hypertension; differential regulation of sympathetic outflow; splanchnic nerve activity; ganglionic blockade; hemodynamic measurement in conscious rats; angiotensin II UNDER CERTAIN CONDITIONS, hypertension resulting from systemic administration of angiotensin II (ANG II-induced hypertension) is exacerbated by activation of the sympathetic nervous system (SNS). Our group and others have shown that salt intake is one such condition (19,21). In rats fed a relatively high salt diet (2% NaCl), the level of blood pressure achieved in ANG II-induced hypertension is significantly higher than in rats fed a normal salt diet (0.4% NaCl); this is associated with an increase in whole body norepinephrine (NE) spillover (14) and enhanced mean arterial pressure (MAP) responses to ganglionic blockade (13,15). In contrast, these measures of whole body sympathetic tone in rats fed a normal salt diet remain near control levels.Despite increased "whole body" sympathetic tone in ANG II-salt (i.e., those fed a high-salt diet) hypertensive rats, we recently reported that sympathetic nerve activity (SNA) to the kidney and hind limb were reduced or unchanged, respectively (28). Suppression of renal SNA has also been directly measured duri...
Cardiac tissue engineering aims to produce replacement tissue patches in the lab to replace or treat infarcted myocardium. However, current patches lack preformed microvascularization and are therefore limited in thickness and force production. In this study, we sought to assess whether a bilayer patch composed of a layer made from human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes and a microvessel layer composed of self-assembled human blood outgrowth endothelial cells and pericytes was capable of engrafting on the epicardial surface of a nude rat infarct model and becoming perfused by the host 4 weeks after acute implantation. The bilayer configuration was found to increase the twitch force production, improve human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocyte survival and maturation, and increase patent microvessel lumens compared with time-matched single layer controls after 2 weeks of in vitro culture. Upon implantation, the patch microvessels sprouted into the cardiomyocyte layer of the patch and inosculated with the host vasculature as evidenced by species-specific perfusion labels and erythrocyte staining. Our results demonstrate that the added microvessel layer of a bilayer patch substantially improves in vitro functionality and that the bilayer patch is capable of engraftment with rapid microvessel inosculation on injured myocardium. The bilayer format will allow for scaling up in size through the addition of layers to obtain thicker tissues generating greater force in the future.
The effects of fiber inclusion, feed form, and energy concentration of the diet on the growth performance of pullets from hatching to 5 wk age were studied in 2 experiments. In Experiment 1, there was a control diet based on cereals and soybean meal, and 6 extra diets that included 2 or 4% of cereal straw, sugar beet pulp (SBP), or sunflower hulls (SFHs) at the expense (wt/wt) of the whole control diet. From hatching to 5 wk age fiber inclusion increased (P<0.05) ADG and ADFI, and improved (P<0.05) energy efficiency (EnE; kcal AMEn/g ADG), but body weight (BW) uniformity was not affected. Pullets fed SFH tended to have higher ADG than pullets fed SBP (P=0.072) with pullets fed straw being intermediate. The feed conversion ratio (FCR) was better (P<0.05) with 2% than with 4% fiber inclusion. In Experiment 2, 10 diets were arranged as a 2×5 factorial with 2 feed forms (mash vs. crumbles) and 5 levels of AMEn (2,850, 2,900, 2,950, 3,000, and 3,050 kcal/kg). Pullets fed crumbles were heavier and had better FCR than pullets fed mash (P<0.001). An increase in the energy content of the crumble diets reduced ADFI and improved FCR linearly, but no effects were detected with the mash diets (P<0.01 and P<0.05 for the interactions). Feeding crumbles tended to improve BW uniformity at 5 wk age (P=0.077) but no effects were detected with increases in energy concentration of the diet. In summary, the inclusion of moderate amounts of fiber in the diet improves pullet performance from hatching to 5 wk age. The response of pullets to increases in energy content of the diet depends on feed form with a decrease in feed intake when fed crumbles but no changes when fed mash. Feeding crumbles might be preferred to feeding mash in pullets from hatching to 5 wk age.
The influence of feed form and energy concentration of the diet on growth performance and the development of the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) was studied in brown-egg laying pullets. Diets formed a 2 x 5 factorial with 2 feed forms (mash vs. crumbles) and 5 levels of energy differing in 50 kcal AMEn/kg. For the entire study (0 to 17 wk of age) feeding crumbles increased ADFI (52.9 vs. 49.7 g; P < 0.001) and ADG (12.7 vs. 11.6 g; P < 0.001) and improved feed conversion ratio (FCR; 4.18 vs. 4.27; P < 0.001). An increase in the energy content of the diet decreased ADFI linearly (P < 0.001) and improved FCR quadratically (P < 0.01) but energy intake (kcal AMEn/d) was not affected. BW uniformity was higher (P < 0.05) in pullets fed crumbles than in those fed mash but was not affected (P > 0.05) by energy content of the diet. At 5, 10, and 17 wk of age, the relative weight (RW, % BW) of the GIT and the gizzard, and gizzard digesta content were lower (P < 0.05 to P < 0.001) and gizzard pH was higher (P < 0.05 to P < 0.001) in pullets fed crumbles than in pullets fed mash. Energy concentration of the diet did not affect any of the GIT variables studied. In summary, feeding crumbles improved pullet performance and reduced the RW of the GIT and gizzard, and increased gizzard pH at all ages. An increase in the energy content of the diet improved FCR from 0 to 17 wk of age. The use of crumbles and the increase in the AMEn content of the diet might be used adventageously when the objetive is to increase the BW of the pullets. However, crumbles affected the development and weight of the organs of the GIT, which might have negative effects on feed intake and egg production at the beginning of the egg laying cycle.
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