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Department of Internal Medicine and Department of Physiology and Biophysics, University of Iowa College of Medicine and Veterans Administration Medical Center, Iowa City, Iowa 52242
When the renal nerves are stimulated with
sinusoidal stimuli over the frequency range 0.04-0.8 Hz, low
(
0.4 Hz)- but not high (
0.4 Hz)-frequency oscillations appear in
renal blood flow (RBF) and are proposed to increase responsiveness of
the renal vasculature to stimuli. This hypothesis was tested in
anesthetized rats in which RBF responses to intrarenal injection of
norepinephrine and angiotensin and to reductions in renal arterial
pressure (RAP) were determined during conventional rectangular pulse
and sinusoidal renal nerve stimulation. Conventional rectangular pulse
renal nerve stimulation decreased RBF at 2 Hz but not at 0.2 or 1.0 Hz.
Sinusoidal renal nerve stimulation elicited low-frequency oscillations
(
0.4 Hz) in RBF only when the basal carrier signal frequency produced
renal vasoconstriction, i.e., at 5 Hz but not at 1 Hz. Regardless of
whether renal vasoconstriction occurred, neither conventional
rectangular pulse nor sinusoidal renal nerve stimulation altered renal
vasoconstrictor responses to norepinephrine and angiotensin. The RBF
response to reduction in RAP was altered by both conventional
rectangular pulse and sinusoidal renal nerve stimulation only when
renal vasoconstriction occurred: the decrease in RBF during reduced RAP
was greater. Sinusoidal renal nerve stimulation with a renal
vasoconstrictor carrier frequency results in a decrease in RBF with
superimposed low-frequency oscillations. However, these low-frequency
RBF oscillations do not alter renal vascular responsiveness to
vasoconstrictor stimuli.
renal sympathetic nerves; renal blood flow; oscillations
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