Skip to content
Open access · CC-BY via OpenAlex

Age-Dependent Salt Hypertension in Dahl Rats: Fifty Years of Research

Josef Zicha, Z Dobešová, Martina Vokurková, Hana Rauchová, Silvie Hojná, Michaela Kadlecová, Michal Behuliak, Ivana Vaněčková, Jaroslav Kuneš

Physiological Research · 2012 · ▲ 67 citations

Abstract

Fifty years ago, Lewis K. Dahl has presented a new model of salt hypertension - salt-sensitive and salt-resistant Dahl rats. Twenty years later, John P. Rapp has published the first and so far the only comprehensive review on this rat model covering numerous aspects of pathophysiology and genetics of salt hypertension. When we summarized 25 years of our own research on Dahl/Rapp rats, we have realized the need to outline principal abnormalities of this model, to show their interactions at different levels of the organism and to highlight the ontogenetic aspects of salt hypertension development. Our attention was focused on some cellular aspects (cell membrane function, ion transport, cell calcium handling), intra- and extrarenal factors affecting renal function and/or renal injury, local and systemic effects of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, endothelial and smooth muscle changes responsible for abnormal vascular contraction or relaxation, altered balance between various vasoconstrictor and vasodilator systems in blood pressure maintenance as well as on the central nervous and peripheral mechanisms involved in the regulation of circulatory homeostasis. We also searched for the age-dependent impact of environmental and pharmacological interventions, which modify the development of high blood pressure and/or organ damage, if they influence the salt-sensitive organism in particular critical periods of development (developmental windows). Thus, severe self-sustaining salt hypertension in young Dahl rats is characterized by pronounced dysbalance between augmented sympathetic hyperactivity and relative nitric oxide deficiency, attenuated baroreflex as well as by a major increase of residual blood pressure indicating profound remodeling of resistance vessels. Salt hypertension development in young but not in adult Dahl rats can be attenuated by preventive increase of potassium or calcium intake. On the contrary, moderate salt hypertension in adult Dahl rats is attenuated by superoxide scavenging or endothelin-A receptor blockade which do not affect salt hypertension development in young animals.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
OpenAlex
DOI
10.33549/physiolres.932363
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-06-23 MST

Cite this

APA
Zicha, J., Dobešová, Z., Vokurková, M., Rauchová, H., Hojná, S., Kadlecová, M., Behuliak, M., Vaněčková, I., &amp; Kuneš, J. (2012). Age-Dependent Salt Hypertension in Dahl Rats: Fifty Years of Research. <em>Physiological Research</em>. https://doi.org/10.33549/physiolres.932363
Vancouver
Zicha J, Dobešová Z, Vokurková M, Rauchová H, Hojná S, Kadlecová M, et al. Age-Dependent Salt Hypertension in Dahl Rats: Fifty Years of Research. Physiological Research. 2012. doi:10.33549/physiolres.932363.
BibTeX
@article{josef2012AgeDep, title = {Age-Dependent Salt Hypertension in Dahl Rats: Fifty Years of Research}, author = {Josef Zicha and Z Dobešová and Martina Vokurková and Hana Rauchová and Silvie Hojná and Michaela Kadlecová and Michal Behuliak and Ivana Vaněčková and Jaroslav Kuneš}, journal = {Physiological Research}, year = {2012}, doi = {10.33549/physiolres.932363}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings