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Hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus is critical for renal vasoconstriction elicited by elevations in body temperature

journal contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 23:27 authored by Joo Lee Cham, Emilio BadoerEmilio Badoer
Redistribution of blood from the viscera to the peripheral vasculature is the major cardiovascular response designed to restore thermoregulatory homeostasis after an elevation in body core temperature. In this study, we investigated the role of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) in the reflex decrease in renal blood flow that is induced by hyperthermia, as this brain region is known to play a key role in renal function and may contribute to the central pathways underlying thermoregulatory responses. In anesthetized rats, blood pressure, heart rate, renal blood flow, and tail skin temperature were recorded in response to elevating body core temperature. In the control group, saline was microinjected bilaterally into the PVN; in the second group, muscimol (1 nmol in 100 nl per side) was microinjected to inhibit neuronal activity in the PVN; and in a third group, muscimol was microinjected outside the PVN. Compared with control, microinjection of muscimol into the PVN did not significantly affect the blood pressure or heart rate responses. However, the normal reflex reduction in renal blood flow observed in response to hyperthermia in the control group (70% from a resting level of 11.5 ml/min) was abolished by the microinjection of muscimol into the PVN (maximum reduction of 8% from a resting of 9.1 ml/min). This effect was specific to the PVN since microinjection of muscimol outside the PVN did not prevent the normal renal blood flow response. The data suggest that the PVN plays an essential role in the reflex decrease in renal blood flow elicited by hyperthermia.

History

Journal

American Journal of Physiology: Renal Physiology

Volume

294

Issue

2

Start page

309

End page

315

Total pages

7

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2008 the American Physiological Society

Former Identifier

2006007809

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-08-03

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