Abstract
The relationship between sympathetic innervation and arterial medial development has been examined in normotensive, hypertensive, and diabetic rats. Using the jejunal artery as a model, the number of nerve fibres innervating the artery as determined from fluorescent preparations, and the medial thickness and lumen diameter as measured from resin embedded specimens were correlated from animals prepared in various ways. The rats used were normal Sprague–Dawley (SD), SD with induced hypertension, SD with diabetes induced with streptozotocin, SD sympathectomized with 6-hydroxydopamine, spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), SHR treated with capsaicin to prevent hypertension development, Wistar Kyoto rats (WKY), and WKY treated with capsaicin. Examination of the jejunal arteries from these rats at 12 weeks of age following normal development, or 8 weeks of hypertension development, or 8 and 12 weeks of diabetes, showed that increased innervation occurred in the SHR under all conditions, and in the diabetic rats after 8 weeks of diabetes. Medial hypertrophy occurred in the SHR and in the SD hypertensive only. It is concluded that the special relationship which exists between the sympathetic innervation and arterial media in the SHR does not occur during hypertension development in the SD rat, nor is it necessary for normal medial development in the SD rat. The sympathetic innervation does appear to have a trophic influence on vascular smooth muscle of diabetic rats, at least in the early stages of the disease.