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Title: Effects of one-clip, one-kidney hypertension in chronically catheterized pregnant ewes. Author: Lumbers ER, Burrell JH, Stevens AD, Weir BA. Journal: Clin Exp Pharmacol Physiol; 1997 May; 24(5):336-43. PubMed ID: 9143784. Abstract: 1. Hypertension secondary to renal disease was studied in non-pregnant and pregnant ewes to determine whether there were any changes in arterial pressure and the distribution of cardiac output and, in particular, whether uteroplacental blood flow was affected. 2. In six non-pregnant, chronically catheterized, uninephrectomized ewes, a reduction in renal blood flow (RBF) to 40-50% of control caused hypertension within 3 h. This was maintained for as long as RBF was reduced (72 h) and returned to control 24 h after the occluder around the renal artery was released. When this experiment was repeated in 16 uninephrectomized pregnant ewes (118-134 days gestation) hypertension occurred within 3 h and was sustained for as long as RBF was reduced (between 24 and 72 h). Arterial pressure returned to control within 24-72 h of restoring RBF. 3. Compared with non-pregnant ewes, pregnant ewes had similar arterial pressures, higher cardiac outputs (CO; P < 0.001) and heart rates (HR; P < 0.001), lower total peripheral resistances (TPR; P < 0.001) and similar blood flows to brain, ovary, pancreas, kidney and spleen. Splenic vascular resistance (VR) was greater (P = 0.006), gut blood flow was greater (P < 0.05) and gut VR was less (P < 0.05). Myoendometrial blood flow/g was greater (P < 0.005) and myoendometrial VR was less (P = 0.006). 4. In pregnant sheep with renal clip hypertension, there was no change in CO and HR, but TPR increased (P < 0.01), as did plasma renin activity. Gut, brain, pancreatic and myoendometrial VR were increased as long as RBF was reduced; in addition, myoendometrial VR remained high for the rest of the experiment. Placental blood flow was unchanged at 3 h; 24-72 h later it was reduced (P < 0.05) and remained low. Placental VR was increased 24-72 h after RBF was restored when ewes were again normotensive. 5. Thus, one-clip, one-kidney renal hypertension in the pregnant ewe was due to increased TPR associated with a fall in uteroplacental blood flow that persisted even when RBF was restored and ewes were normotensive. This reduction in uteroplacental blood flow could account for the high foetal morbidity and mortality that occurs in pregnant women with renovascular hypertension.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]