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Research Article Free access | 10.1172/JCI117269

Mineralocorticoids, hypertension, and cardiac fibrosis.

M Young, M Fullerton, R Dilley, and J Funder

Baker Medical Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia.

Find articles by Young, M. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar

Baker Medical Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia.

Find articles by Fullerton, M. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar

Baker Medical Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia.

Find articles by Dilley, R. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar

Baker Medical Research Institute, Melbourne, Australia.

Find articles by Funder, J. in: JCI | PubMed | Google Scholar

Published June 1, 1994 - More info

Published in Volume 93, Issue 6 on June 1, 1994
J Clin Invest. 1994;93(6):2578–2583. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI117269.
© 1994 The American Society for Clinical Investigation
Published June 1, 1994 - Version history
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Abstract

Uninephrectomized rats drinking 1% sodium chloride were given aldosterone (Aldo, 0.75 microgram/h, subcutaneous [s.c.] infusion), deoxycorticosterone (DOC, 20 mg/wk, s.c.), corticosterone (B, 2 mg/d, s.c.), or the antiglucocorticoid-antiprogestin RU486 (2 mg/d, s.c.) for 8 wk, and hemodynamic and tissue responses were compared with a non-steroid-treated control group. Aldo and DOC markedly increased systolic BP and caused considerable (40-50%) cardiac hypertrophy; B and RU486 caused neither hypertension nor cardiac hypertrophy. Measurements of ventricular cross-sectional areas showed hypertrophy due to an increase in mass of the left ventricle only. Cardiac hydroxyproline concentration was increased considerably by Aldo and DOC, to a lesser degree by RU486, and not by B. Aldo markedly elevated left ventricular interstitial collagen (2.5-fold vs control, P < 0.01 vs all groups); other steroid treatments also increased interstitial collagen over control (DOC x 1.8-, RU486 x 1.6-, B x 1.3-fold), with identical responses for right and left ventricles (r = 0.94). A different pattern of perivascular fibrosis was noted; DOC elevated perivascular collagen (2.1-fold vs control, P < 0.01 vs all other groups); RU486 raised levels 1.4-fold vs control, but neither Aldo nor B significantly affected perivascular collagen. These data are consistent with interstitial cardiac fibrosis reflecting type I (mineralocorticoid) receptor occupancy by administered Aldo or DOC, or by elevated endogenous B after type II (glucocorticoid) receptor blockade after RU486 administration; perivascular fibrosis may reflect a composite response after type I receptor agonist/type II glucocorticoid receptor antagonist occupancy.

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