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A possible sympathetic cholinergic mechanism in the renal reflex elicited by stimulation of abdominal viscera in the dog
Author(s) -
Liang C. C.
Publication year - 1975
Publication title -
clinical and experimental pharmacology and physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.752
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1440-1681
pISSN - 0305-1870
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-1681.1975.tb01824.x
Subject(s) - reflex , cholinergic , stimulation , medicine , mechanism (biology) , neuroscience , anatomy , anesthesia , endocrinology , biology , philosophy , epistemology
SUMMARY 1. Isolated blood‐bathed tissues which were superfused with renal venous blood during various manipulations of the visceral organs of dogs showed no detectable pharmacologically active substances, except a noradrenaline‐like substance which was liberated under some conditions of manipulation. 2. An acetylcholine‐like substance was liberated into renal venous blood during experimental manipulation of visceral organs in dogs during infusion of physostigmine; the acetylcholine activity was detected with the dorsal muscle of the leech. 3. The amount of liberated acetylcholine‐like substance depended on the strength of visceral stimulation as judged by the changes in the hepatic portal venous pressure. Strong reflex stimulation produced the release not only of acetylcholine but also of noradrenaline. 4. Physostigmine augmented and prolonged the reflexly induced renal vasodilator and diuretic responses, and these were abolished by atropine. It was suggested that the reflex involves a cholinergic nervous mechanism. 5. In some dogs there was a high output of acetylcholine from the kidney during visceral stimulation, and this was accompanied by a decrease in urine flow. The reason was not known. 6. Prostaglandin E 1 administered into the renal artery produced similar vasodilator and diuretic responses to acetylcholine, but the onset of the effects were slower and they persisted longer than those produced by acetylcholine.