Obstructive apnea during sleep is accompanied by intermittent hypoxia (IH) leading to hypertension and other cardiovascular disturbances. A comparative evaluation of long-term effects of the neonatal IH on the cardiovascular functions was performed in normotensive Sprague-Dawley and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). The newborn rats were placed for 30 days to conditions of IH (8% and 21% O-2, alternating every 90 s for 12 h/day). Control groups of rats were constantly kept in normoxia. By 6 months, in the spontaneously hypertensive rats exposed to IH at the period of wakefulness there was a statistically significant increase (as compared with control) of the systolic (185.8 +/- 1.7 and 169.9 +/- 1.4 mm Hg, correspondingly, p < 0.010 and the diastolic pressure (96.2 +/- 4.9 and 86.0 +/- 2.6 mm Hg, correspondingly, p < 0.01). During sleep, the systolic and diastolic pressure in these rats was higher than in control animals by 10 mm Hg (p < 0.01) and 12 mm Hg (p < 0.01), its decrease during sleep being absent. In SHR submitted to IH there was an increase in the power ratio of the heart rate variability from 0.9 +/- 0.15 to 1.5 +/- 0.17, which indicates a shift of the sympathico-parasympathetic balance in this group towards predominance of the sympathetic component. In the Sprague-Dawley rats exposed to neonatal hypoxia, the above-indicated changes were not prominent. These peculiarities of the hypertensive rats allow establishing connection of the genetic factor with the sympathetic mechanism providing long-term consequences of the neonatal IH for the cardiovascular control in the SHR.