Hypertension and atherosclerosis in cholesterol-fed rabbits. II. One-kidney, one clip Goldblatt hypertension treated with nifedipine |
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Authors: | M Overturf H Sybers J Schaper H Taegtmeyer |
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Abstract: | Eight groups of New Zealand white rabbits were used to study the effects of moderate chronic one-kidney, one clip hypertension (HT) and long-term nifedipine therapy on atherogenesis. Four groups were fed a normal diet (ND) over an 8-month study period; two groups, one of which was given nifedipine, remained normotensive (NT) throughout the study. Of the two HT groups, one remained hypertensive for 7 months; the blood pressure of the other group was normalized after 2 months with nifedipine. The other four groups of animals were similarly constructed except that they were fed a 0.1% cholesterol diet (CD). The results showed that: although scattered fibromuscular vascular lesions were present in the aortas of normal-diet, HT animals no atheroma was observed; neither moderate chronic HT nor abrupt, short-term HT exacerbated atherogenesis in the CD-animals; nifedipine therapy had no suppressive effect on either fibromuscular lesions or atherogenesis; nifedipine therapy reduced the aorta weight of the normotensive ND and CD groups; the aortic triglyceride content of both dietary groups was reduced by nifedipine; cholesterol content was unaffected; left ventricular hypertrophy was evident only in HT-untreated groups; and only the weight of the left ventricle of the ND-NT-treated group was significantly reduced, but the mitochondria volume per unit volume of left ventricle myocardial cells was reduced only in the NT-CD group treated with nifedipine. It is concluded that an antihypertensive dosage of nifedipine administered to animals with atherosclerosis does not suppress subsequent atherogenesis. |
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