Pancreaticoduodenal arterial rupture and hemoabdomen in ACI/SegHsd rats with polyarteritis nodosa.

2007 
: Many lesions associated with aging have been well-characterized in various strains of rats. Although documented in Sprague-Dawley and spontaneously hypertensive rats, polyarteritis nodosa has not previously been reported in ACI/SegHsd rats. ACII SegHsd rats were maintained on high-fat (40.5%), low-fat (11.6%), and high-fat to low-fat dietary protocols to examine the correlation between dietary fat and the regulation of prostate 5alpha-reductase gene expression and prostate cancer. Seven rats died unexpectedly with hemoabdomen and rupture of the pancreaticoduodenal artery secondary to polyarteritis nodosa (PAN). The purpose of this study was to analyze the pathologic findings in these and the remaining ACI/SegHsd rats and to correlate the level of dietary fat with the presence of PAN, arterial rupture, and hemoabdomen. Approximately 65% of the rats had evidence of PAN by histopathology, with a 24% incidence of arterial rupture. Additional lesions noted included an 88% incidence of chronic progressive nephropathy (CPN) and a 32% incidence of cartilaginous foci in the aortic valve. We found no association between the percentage of dietary fat and incidence of PAN, CPN, or cardiac cartilage. Although arterial rupture is a known complication of polyarteritis nodosa in humans, this case series is the first to document arterial rupture and hemoabdomen in rats with PAN.
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