Title of article
Acute and chronic blood pressure response to recurrent acoustic arousal in rats
Author/Authors
Gang Bao، نويسنده , , Naira Metreveli، نويسنده , , Eugene C. Fletcher، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
7
From page
504
To page
510
Abstract
Repetitive episodic hypoxia every 30 sec administered chronically to Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats has been shown by previous studies to cause a sustained increase in daytime blood pressure (BP). Acoustic arousal in humans during wake or sleep produces an acute BP rise. The question then arises as to whether chronic episodic acoustic arousal applied with the same frequency and duration as episodic hypoxia induces elevated BP. We exposed 14-week-old (N = 10) SD rats in individual cages to recurrent buzzer noise (500 Hz, 100 dB) 6 out of every 30 sec, 7 h/day for 35 days. Ten other rats were placed in similar cages daily but not exposed to noise, to provide a sham condition. An infrared beam with a detector was positioned at the end of each cage. This allowed us to quantify motion by registering the number of times the rat broke the beam per 7 h period. Mean intraarterial BP was measured in unrestrained conscious animals at baseline and at the end of 35 days of their respective conditions. Acute episodic acoustic stimulation caused an immediate response in BP and heart rate. Habituation occurred in that the movement response to 120 noises per hour was 75% in hour one and 20% in hours two through seven on day one. The movement response was further reduced by day 35 but remained significantly higher than in animals not stimulated by noise. The cardiovascular response to noise also showed signs of habituation. Chronic noise stimulation produced no sustained increases in BP after 35 days of exposure.
Keywords
blood pressure , Sleep disorders , SLEEP APNEA , hemodynamics , blood pressure , STRESS , Arousal , noise , Sprague-Dawley rat. , Sympatheticnervous system
Journal title
American Journal of Hypertension
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
American Journal of Hypertension
Record number
647237
Link To Document