Journal
NUTRITIONAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 7, Issue 3, Pages 141-150Publisher
TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10284150400002407
Keywords
blood pressure; docosahexaenoic acid; low protein; prenatal; rats; stress
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Recent findings indicate that prenatal protein restriction, which leads to elevated blood pressure in adult rats, results in decreased levels of docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) in neonatal rat brain. In light of the evidence of a relationship between dietary DHA and adult blood pressure, the purpose of this study was to ascertain whether prenatal dietary supplementation with DHA would prevent the development of hypertension associated with maternal protein restriction. Throughout gestation, female Wistar rats were fed isocaloric diets containing either 18% casein + 10% corn oil (CON; control), 9% casein + 10% corn oil (LP; low-protein) or 9% casein + 8.5% corn oil + 1.5% DHASCO (LP + 0.6% DHA). DHA increased levels of DHA in neonatal forebrain but there were no effects of LP. At 10 weeks there were no dietary effects on blood pressure measured on four consecutive days using tail-cuff plethysmography. There were also no significant effects measured at 30 weeks, using femoral artery catheterisation, despite adequate power to detect a 10 mm Hg difference. Trends in corticosterone measurements suggested higher stress reactivity in the LP group. These results do not provide strong support for the prenatal low protein model of hypertension and a relation with dietary DHA.
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