Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0085580 (essential hypertension)
14,686 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A detailed comparison of blood and plasma volumes and of the transcapillary escape rate (TER) of albumin was performed in SHR and matched NCR, particularly during the phase of rapid pressure rise in SHR. Throughout this early phase of life, the relative plasma and blood volumes tend to be lower, and TER higher in SHR, as would be expected when neurogenic mechanisms dominate the initiation of hypertension. Only in late established SHR hypertension, with increasing signs of cardiovascular complications, blood volume tends to be higher in SHR than in NCR. These results are in general agreement with most observations in early essential hypertension in man. They are of interest in contrast to recent findings in another variant of primary hypertension in rats, MHS. Also the apparently quite different initiating mechanisms in SHR and MHS primary hypertension are discussed.
...
PMID:Plasma volume, blood volume and transcapillary escape rate (TER) of albumin in young spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) as compared with normotensive controls (NCR). 75 45

Maximally dilated renal vascular beds of 13-month-old NCR and SHR were compared to explore how aging respectively longstanding primary hypertension structurally alters total renal resistance, pre/postglomerular resistance ratio and maximal glomerular filtration capacity, as measured per unit kidney weight. According to comparisons of 1.5- and 3.5-month-old NCR and SHR (Folkow et al. 1977), a structurally increased pre/postglomerular resistance ratio rapidly resets the renal "longterm barostat function" in SHR to match the 30-40% pressure rise, thereby increasing total renal resistance 15-20%, while filtration capacity is unaltered so far. In NCR aging to 13 months hardly alters arterial pressure, but increases total renal resistance 10-15%, mainly affecting postglomerular vessels, while filtration capacity is reduced 25%. 13-month-old SHR show an additional 15% pressure rise and--relative to agematched NCR--a further 35% reduction of filtration capacity with a 30-35% increase of total renal resistance, which mainly affects the postglomerular vessels as the resistance ratio is now barely above that in NCR. Thus, advancing SHR hypertension seems to start a renal vicious circle, because accentuated reductions of filtration capacity are parallelled by structural postglomerular resistance increases apparently to maintain GFR by raised filtration pressure which, however, accelerates glomerular deterioration.
...
PMID:Age-dependent alterations in the structurally determined vascular resistance, pre- to postglomerular resistance ratio and glomerular filtration capacity in kidneys, as studied in aging normotensive rats and spontaneously hypertensive rats. 688 Aug 10

Sodium balance was studied in 7 and 16 week old male spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), in matched normotensive Wistar rats (NCR) and in Wistar Kyoto rats (WKR). The animals were placed in metabolic cages and given diets with either normal sodium content (5.35 mmol sodium/100 g food) or with a sodium content 3 or 10 times the normal. Whether on normal or increased sodium diet we did not observe any increased sodium retention in either SHR age group. However, in both SHR groups urinary sodium excretion was correspondingly increased compared with the controls. This shift of sodium excretion from kidneys to gastrointestinal tract in SHR did not reflect any 'primary' inability of the SHR kidneys to excrete sufficient sodium amounts since on high sodium diet they excreted the increased sodium load as readily as the normotensive controls. The present results do not support the concept that a primary renal retention of sodium and water should be of pathogenetic importance for the SHR variant of primary hypertension.
...
PMID:Sodium balance during development of hypertension in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR). 718 May 28