Literature DB >> 4030045

Exercise training attenuates stress-induced hypertension in the rat.

R H Cox, J W Hubbard, J E Lawler, B J Sanders, V P Mitchell.   

Abstract

The ability of exercise training to block the generation of hypertension produced by chronic stress in the borderline hypertensive rat was tested. Twenty-three male borderline hypertensive rats, F1 offspring of spontaneously hypertensive and Wistar-Kyoto rats, were divided into three groups. Two groups (8 rats per group) were subjected to 2 hours of daily, predictable, uncontrollable tail shock for 12 weeks. One of these groups was also given 2 hours of daily swim stress (exercise trained). A third group served as a maturation control and received neither intervention (n = 7). After 12 weeks of stress, direct recording of blood pressure verified the pattern observed with tail cuff: shock only group, 180/118 +/- 3/3 mm Hg; exercise-trained and shocked group, 166/108 +/- 4/2 mm Hg; and control group, 160/98 +/- 6/4 mm Hg (mean +/- SEM). Systolic and diastolic blood pressures in the shock only group were significantly higher than in both the other groups (p less than 0.05). The control group differed from the exercise-trained and shocked group only in diastolic BP (p less than 0.05). During a short-term stress session plasma norepinephrine levels in the exercise-trained and shocked group were significantly lower than those in the shock only group (555 +/- 56 vs 776 +/- 84 pg/ml; p less than 0.05). These results indicate that an alteration of autonomic function resulted from the exercise training, but its contribution to the resistance of the exercise-trained and shocked rats to stress-induced hypertension is unclear.

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Year:  1985        PMID: 4030045     DOI: 10.1161/01.hyp.7.5.747

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hypertension        ISSN: 0194-911X            Impact factor:   10.190


  4 in total

1.  Family history of hypertension, exercise training, and reactivity to stress in rats.

Authors:  J E Lawler; S K Naylor; C H Wang; R H Cox
Journal:  Int J Behav Med       Date:  1995

2.  The borderline hypertensive rat (BHR): a new model for the study of environmental factors in the development of hypertension.

Authors:  J E Lawler; R H Cox
Journal:  Pavlov J Biol Sci       Date:  1985 Jul-Sep

3.  'Adaptive' psychosocial factors in relation to home blood pressure: a study in the general population of southern Netherlands.

Authors:  Ivan Nyklícek; Ad Vingerhoets
Journal:  Int J Behav Med       Date:  2009-05-08

4.  α2δ-1-Dependent NMDA Receptor Activity in the Hypothalamus Is an Effector of Genetic-Environment Interactions That Drive Persistent Hypertension.

Authors:  Jing-Jing Zhou; Jian-Ying Shao; Shao-Rui Chen; De-Pei Li; Hui-Lin Pan
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2021-06-30       Impact factor: 6.167

  4 in total

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