Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (Mol)
630,302 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. Plasma noradrenaline was measured in groups of rats up to 4 weeks after application of a renal artery clip. 2. When renal artery clipping was accoumpanied by contralateral nephrectomy (one-kidney model) plasma noradrenaline was significantly higher in hypertensive rats than in sham-operated control rats at 7, 14 and 28 days. 3. Plasma noradrenaline was not altered at any time examined in the two-kidney model (unilateral clip and contralateral kidney left in situ). 4. Neurogenic mechanisms mediated by the peripheral sympathetic nervous system appear to participate in the development of one-kidney renovascular hypertension, but do not play a significant role in the two-kidney model.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1976 Dec
PMID:Plasma noradrenaline and renovascular hypertension in the rat. 107 60

1. The blood-bathed organ technique was employed to study the effects of angiotensin II and catecholamines on an isolated everted rat aorta bathed in the extracorporeal circulating blood of adult dogs and cats. 2. When the injections were made into the bathing blood close to the everted rat aorta, angiotensin II was half as potent as adrenaline or noradrenaline on a molar basis. 3. After intravenous injections, the vasoconstrictor potency of angiotensin was twenty times that of adrenaline or noradrenaline on the everted rat aorta. The increase in potency was due to the interaction of angiotensin II with catecholamines on the preparation. 4. Intravenous phenoxybenzamine abolished the potentiated vasoconstrictor effect of angiotensin II on the blood-bathed everted rat aorta, but it did not abolish the pressor effect of angiotensin II on the cardiovascular system of the animals. The results suggest that catecholamines released into the circulating blood by intravenous angiotensin II do not play an important role in the pressor effect of angiotensin II.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1976 Dec
PMID:Interaction of angiotensin II with catecholamines in the circulation of the dog and cat. 107 64

1. Plasma noradrenaline was measured in fifty-nine patients with mild to severe essential hypertension and in fifteen normotensive control subjects under basal and orthostatic conditions. 2. In patients with essential hypertension mean plasma noradrenaline concentrations were significantly higher than in control subjects under basal and orthostatic conditions. 3. In patients with essential hypertension basal diastolic blood pressure correlated closely with the corresponding plasma noradrenaline concentrations. 4. Long-term treatment with prindolol of patients with essential hypertension led to a significant fall in diastolic and systolic blood pressure and heart rate and to a significant decrease in plasma noradrenaline concentrations under basal and orthostatic conditions. 5. The adrenergic response to upright posture, reflected by an increase in plasma noradrenaline, was not abolished by prindolol. 6. It is concluded that the anti-hypertensive effect of prindolol in patients with essential hypertension is at least partially mediated by a decrease of sympathetic nervous activity.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1976 Dec
PMID:Increased plasma noradrenaline concentrations in essential hypertension and their decrease after long-term treatment with a beta-receptor-blocking agent (prindolol). 107 67

1. An 'isogravimetric' technique, plus measurement of pressure in a small artery, was used to investigate the responses of upstream and downstream precapillary and postcapillary resistance vessels in the hindquarters of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and normal control rats perfused at constant flow. 2. Dose-response curves to noradrenaline were constructed under conditions of low or normal calcium. 3. In both control rats and SHR the dependence on external calcium during contraction increased peripherally, with the smaller pre- and post-capillary resistance vessels being most dependent and larger arteries least dependent. 4. There may be differences between SHR and control rats in regard to the handling of calcium, particularly in the small pre- and post-capillary resistance vessels.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1976 Dec
PMID:Effects of noradrenaline on consecutive vascular segments at low or normal calcium concentrations in control and spontaneously hypertensive rats. 107 75

1. Hindlimb vascular resistance (HVR) was measured before and after pharmacological autonomic blockade in unanesthetized renal cellophan-wrap hypertensive or normotensive rabbits with previously implanted Doppler ultrasonic flowmeters. 2. When the blood pressure was restored to resting values after autonomic block, the elevated resting HVR in the hypertensive rabbits was entirely accounted for by an increased non-autonomic component (i.e. HVR after block). If the pressure was not restored after block the autonomic component (i.e. resting HVR minus non-autonomic HVR) was overestimated and the non-autonomic component was underestimated. 3. During maximum vasodilatation the minimum HVR was significantly higher in the hypertensive rabbits than in the normotensive group, probably due to structural differences of resistance vessels. 4. Reactivity of the hindlimb bed to noradrenaline, angiotensin II and vasopressin injections was approximately twice as great in the hypertensive rabbits as in the sham-operated group, probably as a consequence of the structural changes.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1976 Dec
PMID:Assessment of autonomic and non-autonomic components of resting hindlimb vascular resistance and reactivity to pressor substances in renal hypertensive rabbits. 107 82

1. In pentobarbitone-anaesthetized dogs, prazosin (2 x 1-3 micronmol day-1 kg-1; 2 x 0-5 mg day-1 kg-1) administered orally for 3 days reduced resting aortic blood pressure as well as the pressor response to bilateral carotid occlusion. Prazosin neither affected resting heart rate nor the tachycardia induced by intravenous isoprenaline, noradrenaline and electrical stimulation of preganglionic and postganglionic sympathetic nerve fibres. Prazosin significantly attenuated the fall in perfusion pressure in a perfused hind leg resulting from the section of the ipsilateral sympathetic lumbar chain. Furthermore, the drug inhibited by about 50% the hind-leg pressor responses elicited by intra-arterial administration of alpha-adrenoreceptor agonists and by stimulation of the lumbar sympathetic chain, without altering the effects of angiotension II. 2. Acute administration of prazosin into the innervated hind leg provoked a dose-related reduction in vascular resistance. However, after spinal anaesthesia no such an effect was observed even when vascular tone was increased by infusion of vasopressin. Under the same experimental conditions administration of papaverine induced a vasodilatation. 3. This study confirms that prazosin impairs the function of vascular alpha-adrenoreceptors, and strongly challenges the claim that this compound produces a directly mediated vasodilatation of the leg vascular bed.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1976 Dec
PMID:Cardiovascular effects of prazosin in dogs. 107 89

1. Isolated hind limbs of rats were perfused and vascular smooth muscle sensitivity to noradrenaline, methoxamine and potassium chloride was measured and dose-response curves were obtained. 2. The sensitivity of vascular smooth muscle to noradrenaline is attenuated by adrenalectomy and low sodium diet; it is enhanced by corticosterone. High sodium diet or administration of deoxycorticosterone did not alter the dose-response curve significantly. 3. The increased sensitivity of vascular smooth muscle after corticosterone treatment is not related to changes in the contractile protein or alterations in the neuronal uptake and extraneuronal metabolism of noradrenaline. 4. These results suggest that the increased sensitivity in corticosterone-treated rats may be due to the number of receptors, receptor affinity to noradrenaline, or changes in the functional link between receptor and contractile apparatus.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1976 Dec
PMID:Changes in vascular smooth muscle sensitivity to vasoconstrictor agents induced by corticosteroids, adrenalectomy and differing salt intake in rats. 107 90

1. Urinary excretion of dopa, catecholamines and their metabolites (vanillylmandelic acid, methoxycatecholamines, 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol and homovanillic acid) were studied in eighty patients with essential hypertension and in twenty-five healthy control subjects. 2. Increased urinary excretion of catecholamines, dopa and catecholamine metabolites was found in a proportion of cases. 3. The relationship between urinary excretion of catecholamine metabolites and the excretion of dopa and noradrenaline was studied. 4. In view of the suggested significance of 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol as an index of brain catecholamine metabolism, particular attention was paid to urinary excretion of this metabolite in the subjects under study.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1975 Jun
PMID:Dopa, catecholamines and their metabolites in essential hypertension. 107 80

1. The effects of lanthanum on renin release and renal vasoconstriction were studied in the isolated perfused rat kidney. 2. Lanthanum reduced noradrenaline-induced renal vasoconstriction. 3. Lanthanum prevented isoprenaline-induced and glucagon-induced stimulation of renin secretion.
Clin Sci Mol Med Suppl 1975 Jun
PMID:Blockade of renin release by lanthanum. 107 84

1. The response of plasma noradrenaline, arterial blood pressure and heart rate to sustained handgrip at 30% of maximal voluntary contraction was studied in patients with long-term juvenile-onset-type diabetes millitus and healthy subjects of comparable age. 2. There was no significant difference between the intensity and duration of handgrip in diabetic patients and healthy subjects. 3. Sustained handgrip produced an increase in plasma concentration of noradrenaline both in diabetic and healthy subjects but the response in the diabetic subjects was significantly less. 4. The increase in systolic blood pressure during handgrip was significantly greater in diabetic subjects than in normal subjects. The increases in diastolic and mean blood pressure did not differ significantky. 5. The increase in heart rate during handgrip was greater in healthy subjects than in diabetic subjects. The response was smaller in diabetic patients with retinopathy than in the patients without retinopathy. 6. The sustained handgrip test may be useful for the diagnosis of abnormal sympathetic nervous system and haemodnynamic responsiveness in diabetic patients.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1975 Jul
PMID:Adrenergic responses to sustained handgrip in patients with juvenile-onset-type diabetes mellitus. 114 94


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