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Title: Alterations in responses to bradykinin, angiotensin I, and angiotensin II during the induction phase of one-kidney, one-wrapped hypertension and associated arterial disease in rabbits. Author: Campbell WG, Donohue JA, Duket LH. Journal: Am J Pathol; 1980 Feb; 98(2):457-84. PubMed ID: 6243872. Abstract: During the induction phase of low-renin, one-kidney, one-wrapped hypertension in rabbits,serum angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) activity is depressed and correlates inversely with the degree of necrotic arterial disease that develops. Responses to the vasoactive polypeptides, bradykinin (BK), angiotensin I (AI), angiotensin II (AII), the ACE blocker teprotide, and the AII antagonist 1-sar-8-ile AII were studied. Responses to BK, AII, and AI showed significant changes in both magnitude and duration (recovery time). Recovery time for depressor responses to BK in hypertensive rabbits was approximately three times that in the control period. One-wrapped, two-kidney control rabbits without hypertension-associated arterial disease showed no change in BK recovery time, although serum ACE activity was significantly depressed. In the experimental period BK recovery time correlated directly with the degree of arterial disease and indirectly with the final serum ACE activity. Duration of the pressor responses after AII correlated directly with the degree of arterial disease and indirectly with final serum ACE activity. In untreated hypertensive rabbits the percentage of increases in blood pressure after AI relative to control animals were decreased, and for all hypertensive rabbits' the increase in blood pressure correlated directly with the final serum ACE activity. Long-term treatment with teprotide moderated the hypertension but had little effect on serum ACE activity or the responses to BK, AII, and AI. Short-term infusions of 1-sar-8-ile AII and teprotide caused significant decreases in blood pressure in both the control and experimental periods, although no change in response to either polypeptide occurred. These studies support other evidence that pressor components of the renin-angiotensin system do not sustain the elevation of blood pressure in this form of experimental hypertension. Alterations in response patterns following AII and AI suggest that a vasodepressor system may be altered. In addition, part of the altered response to BK, and possibly AII, appears related to the development of the hypertension-associated arterial disease.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]