Renal Effects of Acute Amino Acid Infusion in Hypertension Induced by Chronic Nitric Oxide Blockade

  • Qiu, Changbin
  • Engels, Kevin
  • Samsell, Lennie
  • Baylis, Chris
Hypertension 25(1):p 61-66, January 1995.

L-Arginine is the physiological substrate of nitric oxide, a vasodilator that controls blood pressure and renal hemodynamics in the basal state. In the present studies, we produced chronic nitric oxide blockade by oral administration of the L-arginine analogue NG -nitro-L-arginine methyl ester, which produced sustained hypertension and increased renal vascular resistance in conscious rats. Acute excess L-arginine had little effect on blood pressure but completely normalized renal vascular resistance and increased renal plasma flow in chronically nitric oxide-blocked hypertensive rats. In contrast to L-arginine, D-arginine had no renal hemodynamic effects in either normal or chronically nitric oxide-blocked rats. Acutely administered glycine was ineffective in vasodilating the chronically nitric oxide-blocked rat kidney, in a dose that produced renal vasodilation in normal rats. These findings indicate the following: (1) Hypertension induced by chronic nitric oxide blockade due to substituted L-arginine analogue cannot be acutely reversed with excess L-arginine, suggesting that the maintenance of the hypertension is not solely caused by competitive inhibition of nitric oxide production; (2) in contrast, the kidney remains responsive to L-arginine whereas the renal vasodilator response to glycine is abolished in this model of hypertension. (Hypertension. 1995;25:61-66.)

Copyright © 1995 American Heart Association, Inc.
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