1. Central cholinergic activation induces greater thermoregulatory and cardiovascular responses in spontaneously hypertensive than in normotensive rats.
- Author
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da Fonseca SF, Mendonça VA, Silva SB, Domingues TE, Melo DS, Martins JB, Pires W, Santos CFF, de Fátima Pereira W, Leite LHR, Coimbra CC, Leite HR, and Lacerda ACR
- Subjects
- Animals, Hypertension drug therapy, Hypertension metabolism, Male, Pressoreceptors metabolism, Rats, Inbred SHR, Rats, Wistar, Blood Pressure drug effects, Body Temperature Regulation drug effects, Cholinesterase Inhibitors pharmacology, Heart Rate drug effects, Hypertension physiopathology, Physostigmine pharmacology
- Abstract
There is evidence that central cholinergic stimulation increases heat dissipation in normotensive rats besides causing changes on the cardiovascular system via modulation of baroreceptors activity. However, the contribution of the central cholinergic system on thermoregulatory responses and its relationship with cardiovascular adjustments in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs), an animal model of reduced baroreceptor sensitivity and thermoregulatory deficit, has not been completely clarified. Therefore, the aim of this study was to verify the involvement of the central cholinergic system in cardiovascular and thermoregulatory adjustments in SHRs. Male Wistar rats (n = 17) and SHRs (n = 17) were implanted with an intracerebroventricular cannula for injections of 2 µL of physostigmine (phy) or saline solution. Tail temperature (T
tail ), internal body temperature (Tint ), systolic arterial pressure (SAP), heart rate (HR) and metabolic rate were registered during 60 min while the animals remained at rest after randomly receiving the injections. The variability of the SAP and the HR was estimated by the fast Fourier transform. Phy treatment began a succession of cardiovascular and thermoregulatory responses that resulted in increased SAP, reduced HR and increased Ttail in both Wistar and SHRs groups. The magnitude of these effects seems to be more intense in SHRs, since the improvement of heat dissipation reflected in Tint . Taken together, these results provide evidence that hypertensive rats present greater cardiovascular and thermoregulatory responses than normotensive rats after central cholinergic stimulation., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2018
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