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Hypotension and hypothalamic depression produced by intracerebroventricular injections of GABA in spontaneously hypertensive rats
Authors:S Sasaki  L C Lee  Y Nakamura  I Iyota  M Fukuyama  A Inoue  K Takeda  M Yoshimura  M Nakagawa  H Ijichi
Abstract:To determine the central effects of 4-Amino-n-butyric acid (GABA), pressor and sympathetic nerve responses to electrical stimulation of the ventromedial hypothalamus were recorded following the intracerebroventricular (ICV) injection of GABA. In normotensive Wistar rats, anesthetized with urethane, ICV injections of GABA (50-200 micrograms) reduced sympathetic nerve activity, arterial blood pressure, and heart rate in a dose-dependent manner. Graded electrical stimulation of the ventromedial hypothalamus (50, 100, 150 microA) increased not only mean blood pressure but also the rate of sympathetic nerve firing, and both responses were attenuated by GABA pretreatment (100, 200 micrograms, ICV). In spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), ICV-injected GABA also reduced sympathetic and cardiovascular activity, but the magnitude of depressor responses was significantly larger in SHR than in normotensive Wister Kyoto controls (WKY). Pressor and sympathetic nerve responses elicited by ventromedial hypothalamic stimulation were initially larger in SHR than in WKY, but upon subsequent ICV injection of GABA, hypothalamic responsiveness in SHR was inhibited more prominently and became comparable to that in WKY. These results suggest that by depressing hypothalamic function, centrally injected GABA decreases sympathetic nerve activity to thereby lower blood pressure and heart rate, and in SHR, ICV-injected GABA reversed hypothalamo-sympathetic hyperactivity and thus attenuated hypertension.
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