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Renal Medulla in Hypertension
Journal article

Renal Medulla in Hypertension

Abstract

Studies have found that blood flow to the renal medulla is an important determinant of pressure-natriuresis and the long-term regulation of arterial pressure. First, a brief review of methods developed enabling the study of the medullary circulation is presented. Second, studies performed in rats are presented showing medullary blood flow plays a vital role in the pressure-natriuresis relationship and thereby in hypertension. Third, it is shown that chronic reduction of medullary blood flow results in hypertension and that enhancement of medullary blood flow reduces hypertension hereditary models of both salt-sensitive rats and salt-resistant forms of hypertension. The key role that medullary nitric oxide production plays in protecting this region from ischemic injury associated with circulating vasoconstrictor agents and reactive oxygen species is presented. The studies cited are largely the work of my students, research fellows, and colleagues with whom I have performed these studies dating from the late 1980s to more recent years.

Authors

Cowley AW; Roman RJ; Mattson DL; Franchini KG; O’Connor PM; Makino A; Taylor NE; Evans LC; Mori T; Dickhout JG

Journal

Hypertension, Vol. 81, No. 12, pp. 2383–2394

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer

Publication Date

December 1, 2024

DOI

10.1161/hypertensionaha.124.21711

ISSN

0194-911X

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