CENTRALLY MEDIATED CARDIOVASCULAR RESPONSES TO INTRACISTERNAL INJECTIONS OF SYMPATHOMIMETIC AMINES IN ANESTHETIZED RATS
Author(s) -
Hikaru Ozawa,
Toshio Uematsu
Publication year - 1976
Publication title -
the japanese journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1347-3506
pISSN - 0021-5198
DOI - 10.1254/jjp.26.45
Subject(s) - phentolamine , propranolol , blood pressure , epinephrine , norepinephrine , tachycardia , medicine , endocrinology , heart rate , chloralose , tyramine , chemistry , anesthesia , dopamine
The cardiovascular effects resulting from intracisternal (i.c.) injections of sympathomimetic amines were studied in alpha-chloralose-urethanized rats. Norepinephrine (0.5-5 mug i.c.) caused a typical rise in blood pressure with no significant change in heart rate and a fall in blood pressure with a bradycardia, which were completely blocked after treatment with phentolamine (10-50 mug i.c.) L-isoproterenol (0.05-0.5 mug i.c.) and trimetoquinol (0.5-3 mug i.c.), a beta-sympathomimetic agent, usually caused a fall in blood pressure with a tachycardia, which was reduced after treatment with propranolol (10-50 mug i.c.), but trimetoquinol was inclined to cause a rise in blood pressure with a tachycardia. Epinephrine (5 mug i.c.) showed both centrally mediated alpha- and beta-sympathomimetic effects. Tyramine (0.5-1 mg i.c.) caused mixed blood pressure responses presumably due to a release of norepinephrine and epinephrine, and these responses were partially blocked after treatment with phentolamine (100 mug i.c.) or propranolol (50 mug i.c.). These observations suggest that both alpha- and beta-sensitive adrenergic zones may exist on the vasomotor center of the pons and medulla in rats, and both norepinephrine and epinephrine might centrally play a physiological role as the neurotransmitters controlling blood pressure in rats.
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