pubmed-article:555765 | pubmed:abstractText | During the span from 50 to 100 days and beyond, the male stroke-prone Okamoto rat develops systolic blood pressure measures in excess of 200 mm Hg. In the course of developing such a marked elevation in systolic blood pressure mean, this intermittently handled male Okamoto rat exhibits a statistically significant circadian rhythm with large amplitude. This amplitude may represent, at least in part, a response to intermittent handling; it is several times larger than the amplitude for spontaneously mesor-hypertensive (but not stroke-prone) female animals of the same age. | lld:pubmed |