Efeitos da lesão do núcleo septal intermediário sobre a ingestão de água e parâmetros cardiovasculares em ratos induzidas por diferentes protocolos
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2006-05-19Autor
Freiria-Oliveira, André Henrique
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The involvement of the septal area in important regulatory mechanisms of water intake
and cardiovascular adjustments has been shown by several studies. The aim of this work is to
study the involvement of a subdivision of the lateral septal area on dipsogenic and
cardiovascular adjustments. The effects of lateral septal intermediate nucleus lesions (LSI) on
the water intake induced by different protocols, like angiotensin II and carbachol microinjected
into the lateral ventricle, water deprivation by twenty four hours, intragastric hypertonic load
and subcutaneous isoproterenol were investigated. We also studied the role of the LSI in
cardiovascular changes induced by angiotensin II and carbachol microinjections into the lateral
ventricle. Our results showed that the LSI rats did not alter body weight and did not alter the
daily water intake when compared to the sham group. The LSI lesions affected the water intake
induced by angiotensin II (7.6 ± 1.15 vs Sham: 17.01 ± 1.07 ml/60 min) and that induced by
carbachol (9.58 ± 1.51 vs Sham: 13.62 ± 1.96 ml/60 min), as well as affected the pressor
response produced by angiotensina II (∆ 21.3 ± 1.5 vs Sham: ∆ 30.1 ± 2.5 mmHg) or induced
by carbachol (∆ 39.0 ± 2.6 mmHg vs Sham: ∆ 49.9 ± 3.2 mmHg) into the lateral ventricle. The
LSI lesions decreased dipsogenic responses after water deprivation (18.18 ± 0.81 vs Sham:
21.78± 1.23 ml/120 min) and after subcutaneus isoproterenol (5.4 ± 0.4 vs Sham: 8.4 ± 0.6
ml/120 min), but they did not decrease the water intake after intragastric hypertonic NaCl load
(10.5 ± 0.47 vs Sham: 11.56 ± 1.24 ml/120 min). Thus, our results suggest the involvement of
LSI through cholinergic and angiotensinergic mechanisms, as well as the central osmoreceptors
activation, which possibly act by modulating the hypothalamic nucleus activity in both water
intake and cardiovascular adjustments.