Dietary n-3 fatty acids, abundant in fish oil, exert a variety of effects that attenuate cardiovascular disease. In this study, we assessed the effect of fish oil (menhaden oil) on the serum lipid profile in hypertensive and normotensive rats. Spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) or Sprague-Dawley rats (SD) were fed either standard powdered diet (L-485), or L-485 + 5% menhaden oil (MO) or L-485 + 5% corn oil (CO) from weaning through eight months of age. Systolic blood pressure (BP) was periodically determined on SHR. Serum lipid profiles were performed at eight months on samples taken from the exposed hearts of anesthetized, fasted rats. SHR, compared with SD (diets combined) had significantly lower triacylglycerols (TG), higher cholesterol (CHOL), higher high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL CHOL), higher low density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL CHOL), and a higher LDL:HDL ratio. Comparisons among diets (strains combined) revealed that rats fed MO had the lowest values for TG, CHOL, LDL and LDL:HDL; HDL did not vary with diet. SHR were less responsive to diet-induced changes than were SD; no decrease in TG, LDL or LDL:HDL was observed in SHR, nor was degree of hypertension altered in SHR by the MO or CO diet. In summary, MO is more effective than CO in shifting the lipid profile of rats toward one that is less atherogenic. However, the SD rat is more susceptible to diet-induced lipid modification than is the SHR.
Adrenal catecholamines (CA) were measured in 6-, 18-, and 30-mo Lobund-Wistar rats (LWR) maintained under germ-free or conventional conditions and fed either ad libitum or a restricted (70% of adult ad libitum) diet. Levels of dopamine (DA), norepinephrine (NE), epinephrine (E), and dihydroxymandelic acid (DHMA) were determined by HPLC-EC. Compared with values from 6- and 18-mo rats, mean adrenal weight, DA and NE content and concentration, and E content were increased in the 30-mo rats; E concentration was not. The ratio of E:NE declined in the 30-mo group. Germ-free status and dietary restriction had little effect in modulating these age-related changes. Reanalysis of adrenal weights of 30-mo rats revealed two clear subgroups, hyperplastic and non-hyperplastic; the data from hyperplastic adrenals revealed an exaggerated form of the "aged" CA profile, whereas data from the nonhyperplastic adrenals more closely resembled that of younger rats. Thus, aging in LWR is associated with adrenal hyperplasia and a tendency toward elevated adrenomedullary stores of DA and NE, while E stores are maintained near levels found in young rats.
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