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Department of Pharmacology, Toxicology and Therapeutics, College of Health Sciences and Hospital, The University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas 66160
To
determine whether the cardiovascular effects of chronic treatment with
lisinopril are age related, we compared baroreflex sensitivity and
pressor responsiveness in 4-mo- and 21-mo-old male rats that had been
given oral lisinopril daily for 4 wk. Reflex bradycardia elicited by
elevating blood pressure with phenylephrine was stronger in 4-mo-old
rats than it was in 21-mo-old rats and also stronger in
lisinopril-treated rats than it was in untreated rats of the same age.
Pressor responses to angiotensin or norepinephrine were recorded after
combined cholinergic and
-adrenergic blockade and then analyzed not
only as absolute but also as percent increases in mean pressure.
Although pressor responses seemed to be slightly reduced by lisinopril
when expressed as absolute increases in mean pressure, corresponding
percent increases were always larger in 4-mo-old rats than they were in
21-mo-old rats and were clearly enhanced by lisinopril more in younger
rats. The stronger overall enhancement of pressor responsiveness and
reflex bradycardia in younger rats suggests that the cardiovascular
effects of lisinopril diminish with advancing age.
age; conscious rats; reflex bradycardia; pressor responsiveness
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