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THE RESPONSE OF THE CIRCULAR MUSCLE LAYER OF THE GUINEA‐PIG ISOLATED VAS DEFERENS TO TRANSMURAL ELECTRICAL STIMULATION
Author(s) -
ANSTEY MARY D.,
BIRMINGHAM A.T.
Publication year - 1978
Publication title -
british journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.432
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1476-5381
pISSN - 0007-1188
DOI - 10.1111/j.1476-5381.1978.tb17274.x
Subject(s) - vas deferens , tetrodotoxin , guanethidine , stimulation , procaine , chemistry , pulse (music) , guinea pig , medicine , endocrinology , anesthesia , detector , electrical engineering , engineering
1 Four preparations are described for the isolation of the response of the circular muscle of the guinea‐pig vas deferens. These are the 'Furchgotf strip, the ‘Vane’ strip, the chain preparation and the perfused preparation. 2 The four preparations were stimulated transmurally with pulses of supramaximal voltage. The threshold pulse width to which the strips and the perfused preparation responded was 0.025 ms and the maximum responses occurred at 0.1ms. The threshold frequency was 2 Hz for strip and perfused preparations, the maxima being 20 or 50 Hz for strip preparations and 100 Hz for perfused preparations. The effect of varying the number of pulses per train was also investigated on the perfused vas. Responses occurred to train lengths of 8, 16, 32, 128 pulses, the maximum response being given at 128 pulses at 100 Hz; 256 pulses per train did not produce a further increase in response. The perfused preparation exhibited an after‐response at certain frequencies and train lengths. 3 Tetrodotoxin and the local anaesthetics, procaine and lignocaine, reversibly abolished the responses of strip and perfused preparations to transmural stimulation. 4 The response to intramural nerve fibre stimulation was abolished by guanethidine or bethanidine; this abolition was reversed by dexamphetamine. Noradrenaline contracted strip preparations of circular muscle and raised the pressure in perfused preparations; noradrenaline was competitively antagonized by thymoxamine. The major part of the motor innervation of the circular layer seems to be noradrenergic.

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