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Prenatal dexamethasone ‘programmes’ hypotension, but stress-induced hypertension in adult offspring

Low birth weight in humans is predictive of hypertension in adult life. Although the mechanisms underlying this link remain unknown, fetal overexposure to glucocorticoids has been implicated. We previously showed that prenatal dexamethasone (DEX) exposure in the rat lowers birth weight and programme...

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Autores principales: O'Regan, David, Kenyon, Christopher J, Seckl, Jonathan R, Holmes, Megan C
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioScientifica 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2229630/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18252958
http://dx.doi.org/10.1677/JOE-07-0327
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author O'Regan, David
Kenyon, Christopher J
Seckl, Jonathan R
Holmes, Megan C
author_facet O'Regan, David
Kenyon, Christopher J
Seckl, Jonathan R
Holmes, Megan C
author_sort O'Regan, David
collection PubMed
description Low birth weight in humans is predictive of hypertension in adult life. Although the mechanisms underlying this link remain unknown, fetal overexposure to glucocorticoids has been implicated. We previously showed that prenatal dexamethasone (DEX) exposure in the rat lowers birth weight and programmes adult hypertension. The current study aimed to further investigate the nature of this hypertension and to elucidate its origins. Unlike previous studies, we assessed offspring blood pressure (BP) with radiotelemetry, which is unaffected by stress artefacts of measurement. We show that prenatal DEX during the last week of pregnancy results in offspring of low birth weight (14% reduction) that have lower basal BP in adulthood (∼4–8 mmHg lower); with the commonly expected hypertensive phenotype only being noted when these offspring are subjected to even mild disturbance or a more severe stressor (up to 30 mmHg higher than controls). Moreover, DEX-treated offspring sustain their stress-induced hypertension for longer. Promotion of systemic catecholamine release (amphetamine) induced a significantly greater rise of BP in the DEX animals (77% increase) over that observed in the vehicle controls. Additionally, we demonstrate that the isolated mesenteric vasculature of DEX-treated offspring display greater sensitivity to noradrenaline and other vasoconstrictors. We therefore conclude that altered sympathetic responses mediate the stress-induced hypertension associated with prenatal DEX programming.
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spelling pubmed-22296302009-01-27 Prenatal dexamethasone ‘programmes’ hypotension, but stress-induced hypertension in adult offspring O'Regan, David Kenyon, Christopher J Seckl, Jonathan R Holmes, Megan C J Endocrinol Regular Papers Low birth weight in humans is predictive of hypertension in adult life. Although the mechanisms underlying this link remain unknown, fetal overexposure to glucocorticoids has been implicated. We previously showed that prenatal dexamethasone (DEX) exposure in the rat lowers birth weight and programmes adult hypertension. The current study aimed to further investigate the nature of this hypertension and to elucidate its origins. Unlike previous studies, we assessed offspring blood pressure (BP) with radiotelemetry, which is unaffected by stress artefacts of measurement. We show that prenatal DEX during the last week of pregnancy results in offspring of low birth weight (14% reduction) that have lower basal BP in adulthood (∼4–8 mmHg lower); with the commonly expected hypertensive phenotype only being noted when these offspring are subjected to even mild disturbance or a more severe stressor (up to 30 mmHg higher than controls). Moreover, DEX-treated offspring sustain their stress-induced hypertension for longer. Promotion of systemic catecholamine release (amphetamine) induced a significantly greater rise of BP in the DEX animals (77% increase) over that observed in the vehicle controls. Additionally, we demonstrate that the isolated mesenteric vasculature of DEX-treated offspring display greater sensitivity to noradrenaline and other vasoconstrictors. We therefore conclude that altered sympathetic responses mediate the stress-induced hypertension associated with prenatal DEX programming. BioScientifica 2008-02 /pmc/articles/PMC2229630/ /pubmed/18252958 http://dx.doi.org/10.1677/JOE-07-0327 Text en © 2008 Society for Endocrinology http://www.endocrinology.org/journals/reuselicence/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Society for Endocrinology's Re-use Licence (http://www.endocrinology.org/journals/reuselicence/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Regular Papers
O'Regan, David
Kenyon, Christopher J
Seckl, Jonathan R
Holmes, Megan C
Prenatal dexamethasone ‘programmes’ hypotension, but stress-induced hypertension in adult offspring
title Prenatal dexamethasone ‘programmes’ hypotension, but stress-induced hypertension in adult offspring
title_full Prenatal dexamethasone ‘programmes’ hypotension, but stress-induced hypertension in adult offspring
title_fullStr Prenatal dexamethasone ‘programmes’ hypotension, but stress-induced hypertension in adult offspring
title_full_unstemmed Prenatal dexamethasone ‘programmes’ hypotension, but stress-induced hypertension in adult offspring
title_short Prenatal dexamethasone ‘programmes’ hypotension, but stress-induced hypertension in adult offspring
title_sort prenatal dexamethasone ‘programmes’ hypotension, but stress-induced hypertension in adult offspring
topic Regular Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2229630/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18252958
http://dx.doi.org/10.1677/JOE-07-0327
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