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1.
Short-term intravenous infusion of angiotensin II (ANG II) into conscious rabbits reduces the range of renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) by attenuating reflex disinhibition of RSNA. This action of ANG II to attenuate the arterial baroreflex range is exaggerated when ANG II is directed into the vertebral circulation, which suggests a mechanism involving the central nervous system. Because an intact area postrema (AP) is required for ANG II to attenuate arterial baroreflex-mediated bradycardia and is also required for maintenance of ANG II-dependent hypertension, we hypothesized that attenuation of maximum RSNA during infusion of ANG II involves the AP. In conscious AP-lesioned (APX) and AP-intact rabbits, we compared the effect of a 5-min intravenous infusion of ANG II (10 and 20 ng x kg(-1) x min(-1)) on the relationship between mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) and RSNA. Intravenous infusion of ANG II into AP-intact rabbits resulted in a dose-related attenuation of maximum RSNA observed at low MAP. In contrast, ANG II had no effect on maximum RSNA in APX rabbits. To further localize the central site of ANG II action, its effect on the arterial baroreflex was assessed after a midcollicular decerebration. Decerebration did not alter arterial baroreflex control of RSNA compared with the control state, but as in APX, ANG II did not attenuate the maximum RSNA observed at low MAP. The results of this study indicate that central actions of peripheral ANG II to attenuate reflex disinhibition of RSNA not only involve the AP, but may also involve a neural interaction rostral to the level of decerebration.  相似文献   

2.
We investigated the effects of an intravenous (pentobarbital sodium) and an inhalational (halothane) general anesthetic on guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate- (cGMP) mediated pulmonary vasodilation compared with responses measured in the conscious state. Multipoint pulmonary vascular pressure-flow plots were generated in the same nine dogs in the fully conscious state, during pentobarbital sodium anesthesia (30 mg/kg iv), and during halothane anesthesia (approximately 1.2% end tidal). Continuous intravenous infusions of bradykinin (2 micrograms.kg-1.min-1) and sodium nitroprusside (5 micrograms.kg-1.min-1) were utilized to stimulate endothelium-dependent and -independent cGMP-mediated pulmonary vasodilation, respectively. In the conscious state, both bradykinin and nitroprusside decreased (P less than 0.01) the pulmonary vascular pressure gradient (pulmonary arterial pressure-pulmonary arterial wedge pressure) over the entire range of flows studied; i.e., bradykinin and nitroprusside caused active flow-independent pulmonary vasodilation. Pulmonary vasodilator responses to bradykinin (P less than 0.01) and nitroprusside (P less than 0.05) were also observed during pentobarbital anesthesia. In contrast, during halothane anesthesia, the pulmonary vasodilator responses to both bradykinin and nitroprusside were abolished. These results indicate that, compared with the conscious state, cGMP-mediated pulmonary vasodilation is preserved during pentobarbital anesthesia but is abolished during halothane anesthesia.  相似文献   

3.
The role of the renin-angiotensin system in the maintenance of arterial pressure following hemorrhage was studied in conscious dogs. Hemorrhage (20 ml/kg body wt) decreased the mean arterial pressure, but compensatory mechanisms partially restored the arterial pressure toward normal. Plasma renin activity increased more than twofold following hemorrhage. To evaluate the role of endogenous angiotensin II in this compensatory response, a specific competitive antagonist of angiotensin II, 1-sarcosine-8-alanine-angiotensin II, was infused intravenously at 6.0 mug/kg min-1 for 30 min; the mean posthemorrhage arterial pressure decreased from 102 plus or minus 7 mmHg to 80 plus or minus 6 mmHg after 15 and 30 min of analog infusion (P less than 0.01 for both values). After a recovery period of 60 min, arterial pressure returned to pre-infusion levels. These results suggest that angiotensin II plays an important role in the short-term maintenance of arterial pressure following hemorrhage in the conscious animal.  相似文献   

4.
Experiments were performed to compare the possible effect of endogenous arginine vasopressin on renal hemodynamics between anesthetized, surgically stressed rats and conscious rats. Animals were instrumented with arterial and venous catheters as well as with a pulsed Doppler flow probe on the left renal artery. The rats were studied under the following conditions: (1) conscious and unrestrained; (2) anesthetized only; (3) anesthetized with minor surgical stress; and (4) anesthetized with major surgical stress. Two anesthetic agents were also compared, a mixture of ketamine (110 mg/kg i.m.) and acepromazine (1 mg/kg i.m.), and sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg i.p.). Baseline mean arterial blood pressure was significantly higher in pentobarbital-anesthetized rats following surgical stress compared with conscious animals, but blood pressure was not affected by ketamine-acepromazine anesthesia. After baseline measurements of blood pressure, heart rate, and renal blood flow, a specific V1-vasopressinergic antagonist (d(CH2)5Tyr(Me) arginine vasopressin, 10 mg/kg i.v.) was administered to each group. Mean arterial blood pressure, heart rate, and renal blood flow were monitored for an additional 15 min. Mean arterial blood pressure and renal blood flow decreased after V1 antagonism in ketamine-acepromazine-anesthetized rats with major surgical stress, but were not affected in pentobarbital-anesthetized animals. Heart rate and renal vascular resistance were not affected following V1 blockade with either anesthetic agent. These data suggest that arginine vasopressin plays a role in maintaining blood pressure and renal perfusion in ketamine-acepromazine-anesthetized rats following surgical stress, but does not have a significant effect on renal hemodynamics under pentobarbital anesthesia.  相似文献   

5.
Venodilation is thought to contribute to the hemodynamic actions of atrial peptides. Therefore, we measured the effective vascular compliance (EVC) as a parameter of overall venous tone in 7 pentobarbital anesthetized dogs under autonomic blockade during i.v. infusions of rat atriopeptin II (AP II, up to 100 pmol/kg/min), rat alpha-atrial natriuretic factor, and nitroglycerin (GTN). AP II lowered mean arterial pressure by reducing peripheral vascular resistance with a threshold between 3 and 10 pmol/kg/min (but was ineffective in anesthetized or conscious dogs without autonomic blockade). Neither atrial peptide altered EVC, while GTN augmented EVC and caused a 4.6-fold larger reduction of central venous pressure than AP II at equihypotensive dosage. These findings, with infusion rates probably close to endogeneous release, reveal a vasodilator potency of atrial peptides, which is restricted to systemic arterioles without affecting venous tone.  相似文献   

6.
Gravity acts on the circulatory system to decrease arterial blood pressure (AP) by causing blood redistribution and reduced venous return. To evaluate roles of the baroreflex and vestibulosympathetic reflex (VSR) in maintaining AP during gravitational stress, we measured AP, heart rate (HR), and renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) in four groups of conscious rats, which were either intact or had vestibular lesions (VL), sinoaortic denervation (SAD), or VL plus SAD (VL + SAD). The rats were exposed to 3 G in dorsoventral axis by centrifugation for 3 min. In rats in which neither reflex was functional (VL + SAD group), RSNA did not change, but the AP showed a significant decrease (-8 +/- 1 mmHg vs. baseline). In rats with a functional baroreflex, but no VSR (VL group), the AP did not change and there was a slight increase in RSNA (25 +/- 10% vs. baseline). In rats with a functional VSR, but no baroreflex (SAD group), marked increases in both AP and RSNA were observed (AP 31 +/- 6 mmHg and RSNA 87 +/- 10% vs. baseline), showing that the VSR causes an increase in AP in response to gravitational stress; these marked increases were significantly attenuated by the baroreflex in the intact group (AP 9 +/- 2 mmHg and RSNA 38 +/- 7% vs. baseline). In conclusion, AP is controlled by the combination of the baroreflex and VSR. The VSR elicits a huge pressor response during gravitational stress, preventing hypotension due to blood redistribution. In intact rats, this AP increase is compensated by the baroreflex, resulting in only a slight increase in AP.  相似文献   

7.
In rats anesthetized with alpha-chloralose, doses of 0.1, 0.5, and 1 g/kg of ethanol produced an upward shift of baroreflex curves constructed by plotting the heart rate response against mean arterial pressure following evoked rises in mean arterial pressures by phenylephrine or angiotensin II. Whereas the upward shift of baroreceptor curves may be related, at least in part, to a higher base-line heart rate after ethanol, the data showed that the 1 g/kg dose of ethanol significantly depressed baroreflex sensitivity, suggesting that higher doses of ethanol impair baroreflex-mediated bradycardia. The phenylephrine, but not the angiotensin II or the nitroprusside, dose-response curves were shifted to the right after ethanol, indicating a decreased pressor responsiveness and suggesting that ethanol may have alpha-adrenergic blocking activity. This effect was also obtained in conscious rats. That this effect was not influenced by changes in baroreflex sensitivity was supported by the finding that a similar shift of the phenylephrine pressor-response curve was obtained in bilaterally vagotomized and hexamethonium-treated rats. Whether this effect of ethanol on baroreflex control of heart rate was influenced by anesthesia was investigated in conscious rats; the 1 g/kg dose of ethanol that produced the most significant decrease in baroreflex sensitivity was used in these experiments. Ethanol was still able to significantly inhibit baroreflex sensitivity in conscious rats, but the upward shift of the baroreflex curve and the elevated base-line heart rate no longer occurred.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
To test the hypothesis that a muscle mechanosensitive reflex is suppressed in the conscious condition, we examined the effect of anesthesia on the cardiovascular responses to passive mechanical stretch of the hindlimb triceps surae muscle in six conscious cats. The triceps surae muscle was manually stretched for 30 s by extending the hip and knee joints and subsequently by dorsiflexing the ankle joint; the lateral gastrocnemius muscle was lengthened by 19 +/- 2.6 mm. Heart rate (HR) and mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) did not change significantly during passive stretch of the muscle in the conscious condition. At 10-40 min after intravenously administering pentobarbital sodium (20-25 mg/kg), the identical passive stretch of the triceps surae muscle was able to induce the cardiovascular responses; HR and MAP were increased by 14 +/- 1.3 beats/min and 14 +/- 1.4 mmHg, respectively, and the cardiovascular responses were sustained throughout the passive stretch. In contrast, stretching skin on the triceps surae muscle evoked no significant changes in HR and MAP in the anesthetized condition. When anesthesia became light 40-90 min after injection of pentobarbital and the animals started to show spontaneous body movement, the cardiovascular response to passive muscle stretch tended to be blunted again. It is therefore concluded that passive mechanical stretch of skeletal muscle is capable of evoking the reflex cardiovascular response, which is suppressed in the conscious condition but exaggerated by anesthesia.  相似文献   

9.
We investigated the effects of an intravenous (pentobarbital sodium) and inhalational (halothane) general anesthetic on the pulmonary vascular responses to angiotensin II and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition (CEI). Multipoint pulmonary vascular pressure-flow (P/Q) plots were generated in conscious pentobarbital- (30 mg/kg iv) and halothane-anesthetized (approximately 1.2% end-tidal) dogs in the intact (no drug) condition, during angiotensin II administration (60 ng.kg-1.min-1 iv), and during CEI (captopril 1 mg/kg plus 1 mg.kg-1.h-1 iv). In conscious dogs, angiotensin II increased (P less than 0.001) the pulmonary vascular pressure gradient [pulmonary arterial pressure--pulmonary arterial wedge pressure (PAP-PAWP)] over the empirically measured range of Q; i.e., angiotensin II caused pulmonary vasoconstriction. Pulmonary vasoconstriction (P less than 0.01) in response to angiotensin II was also observed during pentobarbital sodium anesthesia. In contrast, angiotensin II had no effect on the P/Q relationship during halothane anesthesia. In conscious dogs, CEI decreased (P less than 0.001) PAP-PAWP over the empirically measured range of Q; i.e., CEI caused pulmonary vasodilation. However, CEI caused pulmonary vasoconstriction (P less than 0.02) during pentobarbital sodium and had no effect on the P/Q relationship during halothane. Thus, compared with the conscious state, the pulmonary vasoconstrictor response to angiotensin II is unchanged or abolished, and the pulmonary vasodilator response to CEI is reversed to vasoconstriction or abolished during pentobarbital sodium and halothane anesthesia, respectively.  相似文献   

10.
The present study tested the hypothesis that kappa-opioids modulate the arterial baroreflex control of heart rate in conscious young sheep. Various parameters governing the arterial baroreflex control of heart rate were assessed before and after activation of kappa-opiate receptors (KOR) by i.v. administration of the specific KOR agonist U-50488H (experiment 1) or vehicle (experiment 2) to conscious, chronically instrumented lambs aged 42 +/- 2 days (n = 6). The 2 experiments were administered in random order at minimum intervals of 48 h. Thirty min after U-50488H treatment, there was an increase in diastolic and mean arterial pressure and in heart rate, returning to control levels by 90 min. A significant increase in the arterial pressure at the midpoint of the baroreflex range and in the minimum heart rate as well as a significant decrease in the heart rate range over which the arterial baroreflex operates were also seen at 30 min after U-50488H, gradually returning to control levels over 120 min. Vehicle had no effect on any of the parameters governing the arterial baroreflex control of heart rate. These data provide the first direct evidence that under physiological conditions in young lambs, the arterial baroreflex control of heart rate is altered after administration of the specific KOR agonist U-50488H, revealing a previously unidentified role for this opioid receptor.  相似文献   

11.
Previous studies with anesthetized animals have shown that the pressor region of the rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) is a critical site in vasomotor control. The aim of this study was to develop, in conscious rabbits, a technique for microinjecting into the RVLM and to determine the influence of this area on renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) and arterial pressure (AP) using local injections of glutamate, rilmenidine, ANG II and sarile. Rabbits were implanted with guide cannulas for bilateral microinjections into the RVLM (n = 7) or into the intermediate ventrolateral medulla (IVLM, n = 6) and an electrode for measuring RSNA. After 7 days of recovery, injections of glutamate (10 and 20 nmol) into the RVLM increased RSNA by 81 and 88% and AP by 17 and 25 mmHg, respectively. Infusion of glutamate (2 nmol/min) into the RVLM increased AP by 15 mmHg and the RSNA baroreflex range by 38%. By contrast, injection of the imidazoline receptor agonist rilmenidine (4 nmol) into the RVLM decreased AP by 8 mmHg and the RSNA baroreflex range by 37%. Injections of rilmenidine into the IVLM did not alter AP or RSNA. Surprisingly, treatments with ANG II (4 pmol/min) or the ANG II receptor antagonist sarile (500 pmol) into the RVLM did not affect the resting or baroreflex parameters. Infusion of ANG II (4 pmol/min) into the fourth ventricle increased AP and facilitated the RSNA baroreflex. Our results show that agents administered via a novel microinjecting system for conscious rabbits can selectively modulate neuronal activity in circumscribed regions of the ventrolateral medulla. We conclude that the RVLM plays a key role in circulatory control in conscious rabbits. However, we find no evidence for the role of ANG II receptors in the RVLM in the moment-to-moment regulation of AP and RSNA.  相似文献   

12.
Experiments were carried out in conscious chronically instrumented lambs aged 1 (n = 6) and 6 wk (n = 5) to evaluate the arterial baroreflex control of heart rate (HR) during postnatal maturation and to investigate any modulatory role of endogenously produced nitric oxide (NO). Before and after intravenous administration of 20 mg/kg of the L-arginine analog N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), the arterial baroreflex was assessed by measuring HR responses to increases and decreases in systolic arterial pressure achieved by intravenous administration of phenylephrine and sodium nitroprusside. The HR range over which the baroreflex operates and minimum HR as well as maximum gain were greater at 1 than at 6 wk of age. These age differences were abolished in the presence of L-NAME, which decreased the HR range and gain of the arterial baroreflex control of HR at 1 but not at 6 wk of age. These data provide new information that age-dependent effects of the arterial baroreflex appear to result from effects of endogenously produced NO.  相似文献   

13.
Abdominal aortic pressure (AAP), heart rate (HR), and aortic nerve activity (ANA) during parabolic flight were measured by using a telemetry system to clarify the acute effect of microgravity (microG) on hemodynamics in rats. While the animals were conscious, AAP increased up to 119 +/- 3 mmHg on exposure to microG compared with the value at 1 G (95 +/- 3 mmHg; P < 0.001), whereas AAP decreased immediately on exposure to microG under urethane anesthesia (microG: 72 +/- 9 mmHg vs. 1 G: 78 +/- 8 mmHg; P < 0.05). HR also increased during microG in conscious animals (microG: 349 +/- 12 beats/min vs. 1 G: 324+9 beats/min; P < 0.01), although no change was observed under anesthesia. ANA, which was measured under anesthesia, decreased in response to acute microG exposure (microG: 33 +/- 7 counts/s vs. 1 G: 49 +/- 5 counts/s; P < 0.01). These results suggest that microG essentially induces a decrease of arterial pressure; however, emotional stress and body movements affect the responses of arterial pressure and HR during exposure to acute microG.  相似文献   

14.
Venous prostaglandins A, E, and F were determined by radioimmunoassay in 10 dogs before and one hour after administration of sodium pentobarbital (35 mg/Kg, iv). In the conscious state, PGA was 0.34 ± 0.04 ng/ml (mean ± SE), PGE 0.20 ± 0.01 ng/ml, and PGF 0.25 ± 0.03 ng/ml. During pentobarbital anesthesia, these levels were unchanged (p >0.05). Thus, pentobarbital anesthesia had no effect on peripheral venous prostaglandin levels.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of acute emotional stress on the sympathetic component of the arterial baroreceptor reflex have not yet been described in conscious animals and humans. Arterial pressure (AP) and renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) were simultaneously recorded in 11 conscious rats before and during exposure to a mild environmental stressor (jet of air). Baroreflex function curves relating AP and RSNA were constructed by fitting a sigmoid function to RSNA and AP measured during sequential nitroprusside and phenylephrine administrations. Stress increased mean AP from 112 +/- 2 to 124 +/- 2 mmHg, heart rate from 381 +/- 10 to 438 +/- 18 beats/min, and RSNA from 0.80 +/- 0.14 to 1.49 +/- 0.23 microV. The RSNA-AP relationship was shifted toward higher AP values, and its maximum gain was significantly (P < 0.01) increased from 9.0 +/- 1.3 to 16.2 +/- 2.1 normalized units (NU)/mmHg. The latter effect was secondary to an increase (P < 0.01) in the range of the RSNA variation from 285 +/- 33 to 619 +/- 59 NU. In addition, the operating range of the reflex was increased (P < 0.01) from 34 +/- 2 to 41 +/- 3 mmHg. The present study indicates that in rats, the baroreflex control of RSNA is sensitized and operates over a larger range during emotional stress, which suggests that renal vascular tone, and possibly AP, are very efficiently controlled by the sympathetic nervous system under this condition.  相似文献   

16.
Summary Hemorrhagic shock is a common cause of death in emergency rooms. Current animal models of hemorrhage encounter a major problem that the volume and the rate of blood loss cannot be controlled. In addition, the use of anesthesia obscures physiological responses. Our experiments were designed to establish an animal model based on the clinical situation for studying hemorrhagic shock. Hemorrhagic shock was induced by withdrawing blood from a femoral arterial catheter. The blood volume withdrawn was 40% of the total blood volume for group 1 and 30% for group 2 and 3. Group 3 was anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital (25 mg/kg, i.v.) at the beginning of blood withdrawal. Our data showed that the survival rate was 87.5% at 48 h in the conscious group and 0% at 9 h in anesthetic group after hemorrhage. The levels of mean arterial pressure, heart rate, white blood count, TNF-, IL1-, CPK, and LDH after blood withdrawal in the anesthetic group were generally lower than those in conscious groups. These results indicated that anesthetics significantly affected the physiology of experimental animals. The conscious, unrestrained and cumulative volume-controlled hemorrhagic shock model was a good experimental model to investigate the physical phenomenon without anesthetic interfernce.  相似文献   

17.
Cardiovascular effects of cocaine in anesthetized and conscious rats   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
D K Pitts  C E Udom  J Marwah 《Life sciences》1987,40(11):1099-1111
This study examined the cardiovascular and respiratory effects of cocaine and procaine in anesthetized and conscious rats. Intravenous cocaine (0.16-5 mg/Kg) elicited a rapid, dose dependent increase in mean arterial pressure of relatively short duration. In pentobarbital anesthetized (65 mg/Kg, i.p.) animals, the pressor phase was generally followed by a more prolonged depressor phase. These effects on arterial pressure were generally accompanied by a significant tachypnea and at larger doses (2.5 and 5 mg/Kg, i.v.), bradycardia. Procaine (0.31 and 1.25 mg/Kg, i.v.) produced similar cardiovascular and respiratory effects (depressor phase, tachypnea) in pentobarbital anesthetized animals. In conscious-restrained animals, both cocaine and procaine (1.25 mg/kg, i.v.) produced pressor responses. The subsequent depressor response was, however, absent in both cases. The cardiovascular effects of cocaine (0.25-1 mg/Kg, i.v.) in urethane anesthetized (1.25 g/Kg, i.p.) animals were essentially similar to those observed in conscious animals. Procaine (1mg/Kg) did not produce any significant cardiovascular effects in urethane anesthetized animals, but did elicit tachypnea. Reserpine pretreatment (10 mg/Kg, i.p.) did not significantly attenuate the pressor response in urethane anesthetized animals. Phentolamine pretreatment (3 mg/Kg, i.v.) did significantly antagonize the pressor effect in urethane anesthetized animals. These results suggest that: the depressor phase is likely due to a interaction between local anesthetic activity (cocaine and procaine) and barbiturate anesthesia, the cardiovascular effects of cocaine in conscious animals are more similar to those observed in urethane anesthetized rats than in pentobarbital anesthetized rats and the pressor effect in urethane anesthetized rats is apparently due to a reserpine resistant catecholaminergic mechanism.  相似文献   

18.
This study reports the effects of angiotensin II (ANG II), arginine vasopression (AVP), phenylephrine (PE), and sodium nitroprusside (SNP) on baroreflex control of heart rate in the presence and absence of the area postrema (AP) in conscious mice. In intact, sham-lesioned mice, baroreflex-induced decreases in heart rate due to increases in arterial pressure with intravenous infusions of ANG II were significantly less than those observed with similar increases in arterial pressure with PE (slope: -3.0 +/- 0.9 vs. -8.1 +/- 1.5 beats x min(-1) x mmHg(-1)). Baroreflex-induced decreases in heart rate due to increases in arterial pressure with intravenous infusions of AVP were the same as those observed with PE in sham animals (slope: -5.8 +/- 0.7 vs. -8.1 +/- 1.5 beats x min(-1) x mmHg(-1)). After the AP was lesioned, the slope of baroreflex inhibition of heart rate was the same whether pressure was increased with ANG II, AVP, or PE. The slope of the baroreflex-induced increases in heart rate due to decreases in arterial blood pressure with SNP were the same in sham- and AP-lesioned animals. These results indicate that, similar to other species, in mice the ability of ANG II to acutely reset baroreflex control of heart rate is dependent on an intact AP.  相似文献   

19.
The mechanism by which pentobarbital anesthesia causes increases in plasma renin activity (PRA) was examined in dogs infused with either propranolol or indomethacin, an inhibitor of prostaglandin synthetase. Infusion of propranolol at 1 mg/kg, (I.V.) followed by 0.6–0.7 mg/kg/hr decreased PRA from 6.98±2.49 ng/m1/hr during control periods to 1.58±0.79 ng/m1/hr 30 minutes after the injection of propranolol (P<0.025). Subsequent induction of anesthesia with sodium pentobarbital caused PRA to rise to 3.87±0.93 ng/m1/hr in 30 minutes. (P<0.01). Plasma potassium concentration decreased from 4.6±0.2 mEq/L to reach 4.0±0.1 mEq/L 30 minutes after induction of anesthesia (P<0.005). Infusion of indomethacin at 5 mg/kg, (I.V.) followed by 1.5 ? 3.1 mg/kg/hr into conscious dogs did not decrease PRA. In contrast to the report by Montgomery et al (Fed. Proc. 36: 989, 1977), we found that the increase in PRA after pentobarbital anesthesia could not be blocked by indomethacin. PRA was 5.3±1.2 ng/m1/hr(M ± SEM) during control periods and was 4.7±1.4 ng/m1/hr 30 minutes after the infusion of indomethacin (P<0.1). PRA increased to 10.9±2.3 ng/m1/hr, 9.2±2.2 ng/m1/hr, and 7.7±1.7 ng/m1/hr at 5, 15 and 30 minutes, respectively, after the administration of pentobarbital (P<0.005, P<0.025, P<0.05). PRA declined to 4.2±1.3 ng/m1/hr 60 minutes after pentobarbital anesthesia (P<0.1). It is concluded that the mechanism by which pentobarbital causes increases in PRA is independent of prostaglandins.  相似文献   

20.
The effects of TA-3090 (clentiazem) and nifedipine on basal sympathoadrenal activity and on the adrenal medullary response during splanchnic nerve stimulation were studied in dogs anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital. Plasma concentrations of epinephrine and norepinephrine were measured in aortic and adrenal venous blood before and after acute administration of the drugs, as well as during left splanchnic nerve stimulation before and after administration of drugs. Following intravenous injections, TA-3090 (30, 100, and 300 micrograms/kg) did not affect basal circulating catecholamine levels, whereas nifedipine (10, 30, and 100 micrograms/kg) markedly increased aortic epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations in a dose-dependent manner in correlation with progressive decreases in mean arterial pressure. The changes in aortic epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations were inversely related to those in mean arterial pressure (r = 0.603, p < 0.01; r = 0.536, p < 0.01; respectively). In response to direct splanchnic nerve stimulation (2 Hz, 2 ms, 1 min, 12 V), adrenal venous epinephrine and norepinephrine concentrations significantly increased, with a high degree of reproducibility. The catecholamine responses to splanchnic nerve stimulation were not affected by either TA-3090 or nifedipine at any dose tested. The present results suggest that the increases in circulating catecholamine levels following nifedipine administration are due to baroreflex activation secondary to the drug-induced hypotension. The study indicates that both TA-3090 and nifedipine did not significantly affect L-type Ca2+ channels related to catecholamine release in the adrenal medulla under the present experimental conditions.  相似文献   

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