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Psychosomatic Medicine 25:538-542 (1963)
© 1963 American Psychosomatic Society
1 Departments of Pediatrics, Radiology, and Psychiatry, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, N. C.
Apparent apprehension caused acute changes in the I131 radioenogram in both normal and hypertensive human subjects. Intravenous adrenaline prompted similar changes in the dog's radioenogram and was accompanied by marked constriction of the renal arteries just proximal to their bifurcation. Normal humans, when subjected to a controlled-conditioned stimulus, demonstrated similar radiorenogram changes; these were interpreted as being due to acute decrease in the renal blood flow.
Submitted on March 29, 1963
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