A B S T R A C T In a previous study we have found that acetylcholine, a renal vasodilator, inhibits fractional and absolute reabsorption of sodium in the proximal tubule of the dog. To delineate whether this effect on proximal tubular sodium reabsorption was related to alterations in renal hemodynamics or to a direct tubular action of the drug, free-flow micropuncture studies were performed in the dog in which the tubular fluid to plasma inulin ratio and nephron filtration rate were determined before and during the administration of a structurally different renal vasodilator, bradykinin. This agent increased sodium excretion from 12 to 96 *Eq/cnin and decreased total kidney filtration fraction from 0.35 to 0.25. However, sodium reabsorption in the proximal tubule of the superficial nephrons was unchanged during bradykinin 'administration.Since it has been shown that a decrease in filtration fraction and presumably peritubular capillary protein concentration will decrease proximal tubular sodium reabsorption, studies were performed to determine whether the fall in total kidney filtration fraction seen with both vasodilators is paralleled by a similar change in the circulation of superficial nephrons. The results of these studies indicate that neither agent altered superficial nephron capillary protein concentration, hematocrit, or filtration fraction.
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