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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 276: R1232-R1240, 1999;
0363-6119/99 $5.00
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Vol. 276, Issue 5, R1232-R1240, May 1999

Mechanism of biphasic response of renal nerve activity during acute cardiac tamponade in conscious rabbits

Masanobu Hagiike1,2, Hajime Maeta1, Hiroshi Murakami3, Kenji Okada3, and Hironobu Morita2

Departments of 1 Surgery and 3 Physiology, Kagawa Medical University School of Medicine, Kagawa 761-0793; and 2 Department of Physiology, Gifu University School of Medicine, Gifu 500-8705, Japan

Renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) responses to acute cardiac tamponade were studied in conscious rabbits with all reflexes intact (Int) or after either surgical sinoaortic denervation (SAD) or administration of intrapericardial procaine (ip-Pro) or intravenous procaine (iv-Pro). In Int rabbits, the mean arterial pressure (MAP) remained relatively constant until the pericardial volume reached 7.7 ml, whereas the RSNA increased to 226% [compensated cardiac tamponade (CCT)], then, at a pericardial volume of 9.3 ml, the MAP fell sharply and RSNA decreased to 34% [decompensated cardiac tamponade (DCT)]; 1 min after cessation of pericardial infusion, an intravenous injection of naloxone resulted in increases in both MAP and RSNA. In SAD rabbits, RSNA did not alter throughout CCT and DCT, but increased on injection of naloxone. In ip-Pro rabbits, RSNA increased during CCT but did not decrease during DCT, whereas, in iv-Pro rabbits, the RSNA response was similar to that in Int rabbits. These results indicate that RSNA responses to cardiac tamponade are biphasic, with an increase during CCT and a decrease during DCT. Sinoaortic baroreceptors are involved in mediating the increase in RSNA, whereas cardiac receptors may be involved in mediating the decrease in RSNA. An endogenous opioid may be responsible for the decrease in RSNA seen during DCT.

sinoaortic denervation; cardiac denervation; naloxone





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