Abstract
The effects of the angiotensin II type 1 receptor antagonist TCV-116 on the wall dimensions of the interlobular and arcuate arteries have been studied. SHR rats were treated with TCV-116 between 4 and 10 weeks, at which time their kidneys were perfusion-fixed and examined using stereological techniques. TCV-116 reduced arterial pressure and left ventricle/body weight ratio, but did not reduce renal arterial wall dimensions. For both arcuate and interlobular arteries, wall density/kidney ratio was significantly greater in the TCV-116 treated SHR than in untreated SHR and wall:lumen ratio was also significantly greater for the interlobular arteries in the TCV-116 treated rats. These findings are similar to those obtained previously using enalapril, and indicate that hypertrophy of the walls of these intra-renal arteries is not secondary to the elevated arterial pressure, unlike in other vascular beds.