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Local and Systemic Phentolamine Antagonism of Norepinephrine‐Induced Hand Vein Constriction
Author(s) -
Goldberg M. J.,
Collins J. F.,
Rowe H. M.,
Cerimele B. J.
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
the journal of clinical pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.92
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 1552-4604
pISSN - 0091-2700
DOI - 10.1002/j.1552-4604.1995.tb05007.x
Subject(s) - phentolamine , norepinephrine , medicine , vasoconstrictor agents , vasoconstriction , anesthesia , agonist , endocrinology , propranolol , receptor , dopamine
The dorsal hand vein distention technique has been used to study the effects of α‐adrenergic receptor antagonists on α‐agonist‐induced venoconstriction. Using this technique, we investigated the dose‐effect relationships between different intravenous routes of phentolamine (an α‐antagonist) administration on norepinephrine (an α‐agonist)‐induced hand vein constriction. Hand vein studies were done on healthy men; each man was studied on up to four occasions. On one occasion for each man, graded doses of phentolamine were infused into a hand vein preconstricted (submaximally) with norepinephrine. The dose of phentolamine producing a half maximal response (ED 50 ) for reversal of venoconstriction, and the maximal reversal were calculated. On the other three occasions (randomly allocated) for each man, graded doses of norepinephrine were infused into a hand vein before and during intravenous infusions of (1) control (vehicle solutions); (2) systemic (other arm vein) phentolamine; and (3) local (hand vein) phentolamine. Systemic and local phentolamine dose ratios (ED 50 of norepinephrine during phentolamine, divided by ED 50 of norepinephrine before phentolamine; divided by the control dose ratio) were calculated. These studies show that phentolamine (administered directly into a preconstricted hand vein) can completely reverse norepinephrine‐induced venoconstriction. Phentolamine, administered by either local or systemic intravenous infusion, induces a significant right‐ward shift (approximately 10‐fold) in responsiveness to norepinephrine‐induced venoconstriction. To achieve comparable degrees of α‐antagonism, however, systemic phentolamine must be administered intravenously at a dose approximately 3,000‐fold higher than that of local phentolamine. Implications of these dose‐effect relationships, and their possible application to the treatment of norepinephrine extravasation and to hand vein studies with other receptor agonist‐antagonist combinations, are discussed.

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