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Renal-Clip Hypertension in Rabbits Immunized Against Angiotensin II

TLDR
There was a specific and complete blockade of the pressor effect of high doses of intravenous renin and angiotensin in vivo, even at ang Elliotensin II production rates which far exceeded those associated with renal-clip hypertension.
Abstract
The rabbit immunized against angiotensin II was shown to be a valid model for the study of renal-clip hypertension. In particular, there was a specific and complete blockade of the pressor effect of high doses of intravenous renin and angiotensin in vivo, even at angiotensin II production rates which far exceeded those associated with renal-clip hypertension. Despite this, four immunized rabbits developed hypertension after renal-artery clipping with contralateral nephrectomy, and in three of these the hypertension was severe. In four other rabbits, there was no evidence of modification of an established hypertension after immunization against angiotensin II. In both groups, the specific absence of pressor response to high doses of renin and angiotensin II after immunization was confirmed. These studies provide strong evidence that angiotensin is not the sole or even the major factor in either the initiation or maintenance of this form of hypertension.

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Renin, angiotensin and aldosterone system in pathogenesis and management of hypertensive vascular disease

TL;DR: Longitudinal studies indicate that patients with low renin essential hypertension appear to be protected from the development of strokes and heart attacks despite similar hypertension and cardiac enlargement and a higher age.
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Hypertension of renal origin: evidence for two different mechanisms

TL;DR: Data indicate that angiotensin II is in fact critically involved in the pathogenesis of the form of renal hypertension in which one renal artery is clamped and the contralateral kidney is left in place, but that it probably plays no significant role in the maintenance of experimental renal hypertension, in which the opposite kidney has been removed.
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Angiotensin-sodium interaction in blood pressure maintenance of renal hypertensive and normotensive rats

TL;DR: The importance of angiotensin for maintaining blood pressure is largely determined by its relation to available sodium or fluid volume, since the renin component in maintenance of either the hypertensive or the normotensive state could be exposed only by sodium deprivation.
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The renin-angiotensin system (first of two parts).

TL;DR: The role of the kidney in blood-pressure regulation was established by TIGERSTEDT and Bergman at the close of the 19th century as discussed by the authors, who produced hypertension in dogs by injecting a cr...
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Antibodies to bradykinin and angiotensin: a use of carbodiimides in immunology.

TL;DR: Antibodies to bradykinin and angiotensin have been produced in rabbits by the use of conjugates containing albumin and the hapten, covalently bound using water-soluble carbodiimide reagents.
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Conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II.

TL;DR: Results obtained with the blood bathed organ technique indicate that angiotensin I is converted rapidly to angiotENSin II in the pulmonary circulation and not by an enzyme in the blood.
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Review: the use of isotopic steroids for the measurement of production rates in vivo.

TL;DR: The most obvious purpose of the use of isotopic steroids to obtain secretion rates in vivohas been to minimize the disturbance caused by the observation to the prevailing secretion rate.
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Radioimmunoassay determination of plasma-renin activity.

TL;DR: A separate radioimmunoassay for angiotensin I has been developed, based on a highly specific antibody which was raised in rabbits by the intra-lymph-node and intra-splenic injection of isoleu 5 angiotENSin I adsorbed on to finely divided carbon black.
Journal ArticleDOI

The amino acid sequence of hypertensin. II.

TL;DR: The amino acid sequence of horse hypertensin II has been determined by the use of chymotrypsin, the fluorodinitrobenzene method, and stepwise phenylisothiocyanate degradation.
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