Abstract
Conclusions
Partial (or even complete) occlusion of the aorta rats produces hypertension only if there is living renal tissue distal to the occlusion, just as there must be a kidney beyond a partially occluded renal artery in order to produce hypertension in a Goldblatt dog. The same degree of mechanical obstruction due to stenosis of the aorta and the presence of a collateral bed never results in hypertension when all of the renal tissue is above the site of occlusion.
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