Résumé
The effects of voluntary exercise on resting systolic blood pressure and vascular lesions of stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (stroke-prone SHR) were investigated with and without 1 % saline loading. Forty male stroke-prone SHR aged 7 weeks were assigned to one of 4 experimental groups. Each consisted 10 animals ; sedentary control (S), sedentary with 1 % saline loading (SS), exercised control (E), and exercised with 1 % saline loading (ES) . Animals were sacrificed at the 5 th week. In the prehypertensive phase, resting caudal arterial systolic blood pressure was significantly lower in the E group than in the S group. However, after being loaded with 1 % saline, the ES group showed higher resting systolic blood pressure than those of the SS group. In addition, the ES group revealed severer renal, myocardial, and cerebrovascular lesions than those of the rest of the groups.
Résumé
The effect of voluntary exercise training and influence of saline loading on blood pressure and cholesterol metabolism in rats were investigated in this study. Experimental animals used were male Wistar strain rats, aged 7 weeks old. These rats were allocated respectively into four groups, each of which consisted of 10 rats; sedentary control (SC), sedentary with 1 % saline loading (SS), training control (TC), and training with 1 % saline loading (TS) . In each of groups rats were sacrificed at the 10 th week.<BR>Following results were obtained in this study.<BR>1) The mean values of systolic blood pressure remained unchanged in all four groups, 2) serum and hepatic cholesterol levels were lowered by 10 weeks of exercise training, 3) the ratio of HDL-cholesterol to total cholesterol increased significantly in the training groups compared to that in the sedentary groups, 4) the incorporation of <SUP>14</SUP>C-acetate into liver cholesterol was significantly lower in the SS group than in the SC group, and 5) a direct correlationship was found between the increased exercise level and the incorporation of acetate into liver cholesterol in both TC and TS groups.