Author:
Pfeffer J. M.,Pfeffer M. A.,Fishbein M. C.,Frohlich E. D.
Abstract
To determine the effects of a chronic pressure load on cardiac function and morphology, spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and two normotensive strains of Wistar rats (WKY and NWR) were studied under ether anesthesia at 13, 25, 52, and 90 wk of age. Although resting cardiac index of the SHR was comparable to that of WKY and NWR at all ages, the peak cardiac output and peak stroke volume per gram of left ventricle determined during a rapid intravenous infusion of Tyrode solution was markedly reduced in the SHR only at 90 wk of age. Autonomic inhibition did not alter the peak stroke volume attained, but reduced peak cardiac output at all ages in each of the strains. Absolute left ventricular dimensions in the SHR increased out of proportion to body growth, consistent with concentric hypertrophy. As peak pumping ability markedly declined from 52 to 90 wk of age in the SHR, the free wall of the left ventricle greatly thickened whereas the septum remained unchanged. At this time the right ventricle also hypertrophied. This disproportionate thickening of the walls of the left ventricle and the hypertrophy of the right ventricle were reflected in measurements of their fiber diameters. These alterations in ventricular architecture may contribute to the decrease in pumping ability observed in long-standing hypertension.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
44 articles.
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