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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (
vasopressin
)
23,126
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
These studies were designed to investigate whether the centrally mediated pressor effects of hypertonic sodium chloride (NaCl) solutions are triggered in response to changes in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) osmolality and whether the chloride ion plays a role in these effects. In Inactin anesthetized, vagotomized rats, alterations in the arterial pressure to cerebroventricular administration (i.c.v.) of various concentrations of NaCl, sodium nitrate (NaNO3), glycerol, creatinine, lithium chloride (LiCl), lithium nitrate (LiNO3) and choline chloride were evaluated. The pressor effects of NaCl were significantly greater than those produced by either glycerol, creatinine and/or NaNO3 solutions. Central effects of NaCl were identical to that of LiCl; likewise, NaNO3 and LiNO3 produced essentially similar increases in the blood pressure. In other words, the two chloride salts produced significantly greater increases in the arterial pressure than the nitrate salts. Choline chloride also produced significant increases in the blood pressure both before and after pretreatment with hemicholinum (i.c.v.). In a separate series of experiments, pretreatment of rats with a
vasopressin
antagonist (i.v.), significantly attenuated the pressor effects of NaCl, NaNO3 and that of choline chloride whereas after autonomic ganglionic blockade with chlorisondamine, pressor responses of only NaCl, but not those of NaNO3 or choline chloride were significantly inhibited. These data indicate that elevation of either Na+ or Cl- in the CSF facilitates
vasopressin
secretion and that Na+ and Cl- ions function synergistically in the central nervous system (C.N.S.) to enhance sympathetic activity. The present studies demonstrate that the circumventricular structures in the C.N.S. that participate in the regulation of blood pressure are more responsive to changes in concentrations of Na+ and Cl- rather than to net changes in the CSF osmolality. The data further suggest that the chloride ion contributes to the central pressor effects of NaCl and may play a role in the pathophysiology of
salt
-dependent hypertension.
...
PMID:Studies on the role(s) of cerebrospinal fluid osmolality and chloride ion in the centrally mediated pressor responses of sodium chloride. 182 60
Atrial natriuretic factor (ANP) is present in neuronal cells of the locus coeruleus and its vicinity in the pontine tegmentum and moderate amount of ANP is detectable in this area by radioimmunoassay. The ANP (both peripheral and brain-born) is known as a neuropeptide which may influence the body
salt
and water homeostasis and blood pressure by targeting both central and peripheral regulatory mechanisms. Whether this pontine ANP cell group is involved in any of these regulatory mechanisms, the effect of various types of hypertension and experimental alterations in the
salt
and water balance on ANP levels was measured by radioimmunoassay in the locus coeruleus of rats. Adrenalectomy, as well as aldosterone and dexamethasone treatments failed to alter ANP levels in the locus coeruleus. Reduced ANP levels were measured in spontaneously hypertensive (both young and adult) rats, and in diabetes insipidus (Brattleboro) rats with
vasopressin
replacement. In contrast to these situations, elevated ANP levels were found in rats with DOCA-
salt
or 1-kidney-1-clip hypertension. These data suggest a link between ANP levels in the locus coeruleus and fluid volume homeostasis. Whether this link is causal and connected with the major activity of locus coeruleus neurons (noradrenergic influence on brain regulatory activities) needs further informations.
...
PMID:Atrial natriuretic peptide in the locus coeruleus and its possible role in the regulation of arterial blood pressure, fluid and electrolyte homeostasis. 183 23
The potent diuretic and natriuretic properties of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) suggest that atrial hormones may participate to the regulation of
salt
and water excretion under physiological conditions. ANF, via the increase of its intracellular second messenger cGMP, has been recently shown to inhibit the apical sodium channel of the inner medullary collecting tubule (IMCD). In addition, ANF inhibits renin and aldosterone synthesis and antagonizes the antinatriuretic effects of angiotensin II. ANF may also contribute to the excretion of free water by inhibiting both the secretion of
vasopressin
and its antidiuretic action. ANF appears to play an important physiological role in sodium repleted states, or when the effective plasma volume is increased. On the contrary, when the effective plasma volume is decreased or in sodium depleted states, the natriuretic effect of both endogenous and exogenous ANF is severely blunted. That ANF-resistance may be related to the activation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone axis, increased circulating catecholamines, renal sympathetic nerve stimulation, changes in renal hemodynamics or increased degradation of ANF. All these factors could explain the lack of significant natriuretic effect of both endogenous and exogenous ANF in some pathological conditions such as heart failure or liver cirrhosis. ANF may also been concerned in water homeostasis. In addition to the well-known osmoregulatory pathways of water metabolism, we recently found that ANF could be involved in the volume adjustment to acute water intake in normal man.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Atrial natriuretic factor and the endocrine control of electrolyte homeostasis. 183 42
In previous studies we found that
vasopressin
stimulation of both cyclic AMP (cAMP) formation in cortical collecting tubules (CCT) and sodium reabsorption in isolated perfused kidneys was markedly exaggerated in rats with mineralocorticoid hypertension. In the present study, we tested the response (cAMP accumulation) of cortical and outer medullary collecting tubules (OMCT) to
vasopressin
in two rat models that are resistant to deoxycorticosterone acetate (DOCA)-induced hypertension, the Wistar-Furth strain and NaCl-deficient rats. The blood pressure of normal outbred Wistar rats rose to hypertensive levels (systolic pressure more than 165 mm Hg) during a 5-week treatment with DOCA (10 mg/week) and 1% saline to drink. Significant hypertrophy of the heart and kidneys was also observed. Vasopressin (10(-8) M)-induced cAMP formation was enhanced 3.4-fold in the CCT (OMCT unchanged) of hypertensive rats compared with normotensive controls. Significant hypertrophy (as indexed by tubule diameter) of the CCT but not the OMCT was also observed in DOCA-
salt
hypertensive rats. Restriction of dietary NaCl (0.13% in chow, tap water to drink) completely prevented DOCA-induced hypertension, organ and CCT hypertrophy, and enhancement of
vasopressin
-stimulated cAMP formation in the CCT. In Wistar-Furth rats, DOCA-
salt
treatment did not alter blood pressure or cause significant organ hypertrophy. However, DOCA-
salt
treatment enhanced
vasopressin
-stimulated cAMP formation by 4.1-fold in CCT of Wistar-Furth rats, with significant tubular hypertrophy in the CCT but not the OMCT. We conclude that DOCA-induced hypertension and changes in CCT function are dependent on excess dietary NaCl.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Vasopressin response in collecting ducts of rats resistant to mineralocorticoid hypertension. 184 20
An endogenous ouabain-like sodium pump inhibitor was demonstrated originally in serum or plasma of acutely extracellular fluid volume (ECFV) expanded animals and humans. Since then numerous studies have confirmed the presence of ouabain-like factor(s) (OLF) in blood, urine, cerebrospinal fluid, and various tissues including the heart and hypothalamus. Some of these OLFs represent well-known endogenous compounds, eg, free unsaturated fatty acids, which in vitro exhibit inhibition of transepithelial sodium transport, direct inhibition of the Na-K-ATPase enzyme, displacement of 3H-ouabain from its membrane receptor, and crossreaction with a digoxin antibody. Small molecular weight (MW) OLFs of yet unknown peptidic or nonpeptidic nature, which may be of hypothalamic origin, were also detected in various animal models of hypertension and in hypertensive patients. They may play a pathophysiological role especially in
salt
- and volume-dependent forms of hypertension. Our results show that OLFs increase basal and
vasopressin
-stimulated intracellular Ca2+ release in rat vascular smooth muscle cells in culture and in human platelets similar to the newly discovered endothelin. In addition, a natriuretic factor (natriuretic hormone) was detected by bioassay in plasma and urine, whose activity changes in parallel with sodium intake. We found that this natriuretic factor is associated with small peptides with a MW of less than 1,000. It is, however, unlikely that the two biological properties, ie, the ouabain-like and natriuretic activities, reside in a single compound. A number of circulating OLFs is certainly not identical with a humoral natriuretic factor. Nevertheless, there is increasing evidence for multiple interactions between OLF and the atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Endogenous natriuretic and ouabain-like factors. Their roles in body fluid volume and blood pressure regulation. 184 64
The effect of ischemia-reperfusion on endothelium-dependent relaxations and reactivity of vascular smooth-muscle cells was studied in rings of basilar arteries obtained from six dogs exposed to 12 min of complete global cerebral ischemia followed by 100 min of reperfusion. Three sham-operated control dogs served as controls. Ischemia was induced either by an increase in intracranial pressure or by aortic occlusion. The rings were suspended for isometric tension recording in physiological
salt
solution. Ischemia-reperfusion did not affect endothelium-dependent relaxations to
vasopressin
and bradykinin. In rings without endothelium relaxations to sodium nitroprusside, molsidomine (SIN-1), and papaverine as well as contractions to 5-hydroxytryptamine and KCl were preserved. These results demonstrate that in large canine cerebral arteries, ischemia-reperfusion of these durations does not affect relaxations mediated by activation of endothelium or direct relaxations and contractions of vascular smooth-muscle cells.
...
PMID:Ischemia-reperfusion does not affect reactivity of isolated canine basilar artery. 187 14
The present study examined whether alterations in papillary blood flow, renal interstitial pressure (RIHP), and the pressure-natriuretic (PN) response are associated with the development of hypertension in inbred Dahl
salt
-sensitive (Dahl-S) rats. The PN responses were compared in 18- to 20-wk-old, Inactin-anesthetized, inbred Dahl
salt
-sensitive (S/Jr) and
salt
-resistant (R/Jr) rats fed a low-(0.3%) and a high- (8.0%) sodium chloride diet. Cortical and papillary blood flows were measured using laser-Doppler flowmetry. Neural and hormonal influences on the kidney were controlled by renal denervation and by fixing plasma norepinephrine,
vasopressin
, corticosterone, and aldosterone levels by intravenous infusion. The slope of the PN relationship in S/Jr rats maintained on a low-
salt
diet was 62% lower than that observed in R/Jr rats; however, whole kidney, cortical, and papillary blood flows and RIHP were not significantly different at any perfusion pressure studied. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) was 25% lower in S/Jr rats than in R/Jr animals maintained on a low-
salt
diet. The slopes of the PN responses were similar in S/Jr and R/Jr rats exposed to a high-
salt
diet, but the entire relationship was shifted toward higher pressures by 20 mmHg in the S/Jr rats. Control cortical and papillary blood flows measured at control mean arterial pressures of 126 +/- 3 and 167 +/- 5 mmHg in R/Jr and S/Jr rats, respectively, were not significantly different. However, cortical and papillary blood flows were 25% lower in the S/Jr than in the R/Jr rats exposed to a high-
salt
diet when compared at equivalent renal perfusion pressures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pressure natriuresis and cortical and papillary blood flow in inbred Dahl rats. 188 48
Salt and water balance within the body is controlled by the hormonal influence of
vasopressin
. Vasopressin is produced in the hypothalamus, stored and released from the posterior lobe of the pituitary, and travels via the blood to the kidneys to regulate the amount and concentration of urine excreted. Oversecretion or undersecretion of
vasopressin
, eg, diabetes insipidus (DI) or syndrome of inappropriate secretion of
antidiuretic hormone
(SIADH) results in an imbalance of the
salt
-to-water ratio. In children this hormonal imbalance may occur secondary to a suprasellar brain tumor and/or the treatment of such. Approximately 50% to 75% of children with suprasellar tumors will develop permanent DI and the remainder will experience transient postoperative DI or SIADH. Pathophysiology of
vasopressin
's control on
salt
and water balance and its relationship to suprasellar brain tumors in children are presented. Nursing assessment and intervention parameters for management of DI and SIADH in children with brain tumors are also discussed.
...
PMID:Diabetes insipidus and syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone in children with midline suprasellar brain tumors. 193 Aug
Some simple N-benzylimidazoles, originally described by Takeda Chemical Industries (Osaka, Japan), were characterized to be very weak but selective nonpeptide angiotensin II (Ang II) receptor antagonists with a competitive mode of action. Chemical modifications of these led to EXP6155 and EXP6803, which showed approximately 10- and 100-fold higher affinity, respectively, but were orally ineffective. Oral activity was obtained for the biphenyl carboxylic acid derivatives EXP7711 and especially EXP9654. A further advance in the design of nonpeptide Ang II receptor antagonists was provided by DuP 753, an analogue of EXP7711 in which the carboxylic acid function is replaced by its tetrazol-5-yl equivalent. DuP 753 (2-n-butyl-4-chloro-5-hydroxymethyl-1-[(2'-(1H-tetrazol-5-yl)bi phe nyl-4- yl)methyl]imidazole, potassium
salt
) displaces radiolabeled Ang II from its specific binding sites in various tissues, affording IC50 values of approximately 20 nM. DuP 753 competitively antagonizes Ang II-induced responses in various in vitro and in vivo preparations but does not influence those to KCl, norepinephrine,
vasopressin
, and others, nor does it affect converting enzyme and renin. In high renin animal models of elevated arterial blood pressure, intravenous and oral administrations of DuP 753 produce a sustained decrease in pressure without influencing heart rate. Marked antihypertensive effects are observed in spontaneously hypertensive rats, but no efficacy is noticed in deoxycorticosterone acetate hypertensive animals. DuP 753 showed no agonistic properties in any of the above test systems and has been chosen to undergo clinical trials for the treatment of hypertension. In rats, the 5-carboxylic acid (EXP3174) represents a major metabolite of DuP 753.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Angiotensin II receptor antagonists. From discovery to antihypertensive drugs. 193 77
Experiments on albino rats with experimental traumatic brain edema were made to study humoral factors of water-
salt
metabolism regulation: neuropeptides (
vasopressin
, angiotensin-II as well as aldosterone in the brain and body tissues using radioimmune analysis. Besides, the effect of natriuretic hormone on brain edema was assessed. It was established in preliminary investigations that the highest water content in the brain was recorded on the third day after the suffering of a craniocerebral injury. During the same time, the injured hemisphere showed an increase of sodium ions. The level of
vasopressin
in cerebral hemispheres rose whereas in the pituitary and blood plasma, it decreased. The injured hemisphere manifested a dramatic increase of angiotensin content. The craniocerebral injury gave rise to aldosterone secretion enhancement and to its elevation in the plasma and brain. The marked and non-uniform alterations in factors of water-
salt
metabolism and of the vascular tone regulation are important components in the pathogenesis of brain edema, which determines goal-oriented approaches to the search of agents for the treatment of the pathology under consideration.
...
PMID:[Humoral factors of regulation of water-salt metabolism in experimental traumatic brain edema]. 196 60
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