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1.
P T Horn  J D Kohli 《Life sciences》1992,51(10):757-764
Inhibitory alpha-adrenoceptors were studied in cardiac ganglia of pentobarbital-anesthetized dogs. Blockade of alpha 1- or alpha 2-adrenoceptors augmented preganglionic nerve stimulation induced tachycardia without altering the response to postganglionic nerve stimulation. The effect produced by blockade of ganglionic alpha 1-adrenoceptors with terazosin had different frequency-response characteristics from, was of smaller magnitude than, and was additive with the effect produced by blockade of ganglionic alpha 2-adrenoceptors with rauwolscine. The response to activation of ganglionic nicotinic cholinergic receptors in the absence of electrical stimulation of the preganglionic nerve was not affected by blockade of either alpha 1- or alpha 2-adrenoceptors. The response to nicotinic cholinergic receptor activation during periods of continuous preganglionic nerve stimulation was augmented following blockade of alpha 2-adrenoceptors but unaffected by alpha 1-adrenoceptor blockade. These results suggest that there are two different inhibitory pathways involving alpha-adrenoceptors in mammalian sympathetic ganglia and provide evidence that these inhibitory pathways are operative under the experimental conditions of ganglionic transmission.  相似文献   

2.
Electrical stimulation (100 Hz, 1 ms, 150 microA, 10 s) of the anterior hypothalamus in chloralose-anesthetized rats evoked a biphasic pressor response consisting of an initial sharp rise in arterial pressure at the onset of stimulation, followed by a second elevation after cessation of the stimulus. This response was accompanied by an increase in plasma noradrenaline and adrenaline levels. Peripheral sympathectomy with guanethidine selectively abolished the primary phase of the biphasic pressor response, while bilateral removal of the adrenal medulla eliminated only the secondary component. After alpha-adrenergic blockade with phentolamine, the primary phase of the stimulation-induced response was reduced while the secondary pressor component was blocked and replaced by a significant hypotension. The intravenous administration of sotalol enhanced the secondary pressor component without affecting the stimulation-induced plasma noradrenaline and adrenaline responses. After treatment with atropine, the secondary pressor effect was also potentiated, as the reflex bradycardia normally associated with the response was eliminated. A subsequent administration of sotalol in these rats further potentiated the secondary pressor component to stimulation. In rats treated with atropine and sotalol, the sympathetic vasomotor and the adrenomedullary pressor responses could be dissociated according to thresholds and stimulus frequency or current-response characteristics. The results suggest that in intact rats, adrenaline-induced vasodilation and reflex cardiac inhibition contribute to either reduce or mask the adrenomedullary component of the biphasic pressor response evoked by stimulation of the anterior hypothalamus. The study also raises the hypothesis of a dual regulation of both components of the sympathetic system in the anterior hypothalamic region.  相似文献   

3.
Neural and humoral mechanisms involved in the reflex pressor response during mechanical stimulation of the stomach of rats were investigated. The arterial blood pressure response was prevented by inhibition of alpha-adrenergic vasoconstriction using either an alpha-adrenergic blocker or a ganglionic blocker. In addition, there was a small decrease in the response after nephrectomy. However, there were no alterations in the response after beta-adrenergic blockade, bilateral adrenalectomy, inhibition of converting enzyme activity with enalapril or bilateral cervical vagus nerve transection. The heart rate was not modified after either intervention. After vagotomy the time of recovery of the basal blood pressure was significantly prolonged. It can be concluded that the blood pressure response to mechanical stimulation of the stomach wall is of neural rather than of humoral origin and mainly involves activation of alpha-adrenergic receptors. Vagal efferent pathways could be also involved.  相似文献   

4.
Deafferentation of sinoaortic baroreceptors produces a marked increase in the lability of arterial pressure that is sustained chronically. Studies reviewed in this paper were designed to determine the mechanisms responsible for generating arterial pressure lability. Pharmacological interruption of the humoral vasopressin and angiotensin systems failed to alter arterial pressure lability. In contrast, blockade of sympathetic nervous system transmission at both ganglionic and alpha-adrenergic receptor levels significantly attenuated lability. A similar effect was observed with the peripheral neurotoxin, 6-hydroxydopamine. After blockade of sympathetic transmission, a further reduction in lability was produced by blocking the renin-angiotensin or vasopressin systems. The dissociation of the level of arterial pressure from lability was achieved with parachloroamphetamine which raised arterial pressure but reduced lability. A substantial peripheral contribution to lability was obtained in experiments in which the alpha-adrenergic agonist, phenylephrine, produced a marked increase in lability in both normal and baroreceptor-denervated animals in which humoral and neural transmission were blocked. These data demonstrate that following baroreceptor deafferentation, arterial pressure lability is produced primarily by the sympathetic nervous system and secondarily by circulating humoral factors that appear to act on vascular smooth muscle to induce fluctuations in the level of arterial pressure.  相似文献   

5.
It has recently been reported that stimulation of the region of the subfornical organ (SFO) elicits an increase in arterial pressure. However, the mechanisms and forebrain neural circuitry that are involved in this cardiovascular response have not been elucidated. The present study was done in urethane-anaesthetized rats to determine whether selective activation of SFO neurons elicit cardiovascular responses and whether these responses were mediated by a pathway involving the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVH). Stimulation sites which required the lowest threshold current (30 microA) to elicit a pressor response and at which the largest rise in mean arterial pressure (MAP; 22 +/- 2 mmHg) was elicited at a constant current intensity (150 microA) were histologically localized in the region of the SFO. Short (mean peak latency; 4 +/- 2 s) and long (mean peak latency; 61 +/- 8 s) latency increases in MAP were observed during and after electrical stimulation of the SFO, respectively. Cardiac slowing accompanied the short latency pressor response and cardioacceleration was observed in most (57%) of the cases to accompany the late pressor response. Microinjection of L-glutamate into the SFO consistently elicited cardiovascular responses qualitatively similar to those observed during electrical stimulation. Ganglionic blockade abolished the short latency increase in MAP and the accompanying bradycardia. However, the long latency pressor and cardioacceleratory responses were not altered by ganglionic blockade and adrenalectomy. Selective bilateral electrolytic or kainic acid lesions of the region of the PVH significantly attenuated the cardiovascular responses elicited by stimulation of the SFO. These data suggest that activation of neurons in the SFO elicit cardiovascular responses partially mediated by sympathetic outflow through a neural pathway involving the PVH.  相似文献   

6.
Our objective was to determine whether neuronally induced atrial arrhythmias can be modified by alpha-adrenergic receptor blockade. In 30 anesthetized dogs, trains of five electrical stimuli (1 mA; 1 ms) were delivered immediately after the P wave of the ECG to mediastinal nerves associated with the superior vena cava. Regional atrial electrical events were monitored with 191 atrial unipolar electrodes. Mediastinal nerve sites were identified that reproducibly initiated atrial arrhythmias. These sites were then restimulated following 1 h (time control, n = 6), or the intravenous administration of naftopidil (alpha(1)-adrenergic blocker: 0.2 mg/kg, n = 6), yohimbine (alpha(2)-adrenergic blocker: 1 mg/kg, n = 6) or both (n = 8). A ganglionic blocker (hexamethonium: 1 mg/kg) was tested in four dogs. Stimulation of mediastinal nerves sites consistently elicited atrial tachyarrhythmias. Repeat stimulation after 1 h in the time-control group exerted a 19% decrease of the sites still able to induce atrial tachyarrhythmias. Hexamethonium inactivated 78% of the previously active sites. Combined alpha-adrenoceptor blockade inactivated 72% of the previously active sites. Bradycardia responses induced by mediastinal nerve stimulation were blunted by hexamethonium, but not by alpha(1,2)-adrenergic blockade. Naftopidil or yohimbine alone eliminated atrial arrhythmia induction from 31% and 34% of the sites (similar to time control). We conclude that heterogeneous activation of the intrinsic cardiac nervous system results in atrial arrhythmias that involve intrinsic cardiac neuronal alpha-adrenoceptors. In contrast to the global suppression exerted by hexamethonium, we conclude that alpha-adrenoceptor blockade targets intrinsic cardiac local circuit neurons involved in arrhythmia formation and not the flow-through efferent projections of the cardiac nervous system.  相似文献   

7.
Vasopressinergic pathways within the spinal cord have been implicated in the control of cardiovascular function. This study was undertaken to determine the mechanisms whereby intrathecally administered arginine vasopressin (AVP) increases blood pressure and heart rate in anesthetized rats. The cardiovascular responses to intrathecal AVP administration were significantly attenuated after intravenous administration of the ganglionic blocking agent, chlorisondamine chloride, as were the pressor responses following alpha-adrenergic receptor blockade with phentolamine and the heart rate responses following beta-receptor blockade with propranolol. Intrathecal administration of the V1 vasopressin receptor antagonist d(CH2)5Tyr(Me)AVP completely blocked the cardiovascular responses to intrathecal AVP injections, but did not significantly alter the responses to intrathecal substance P injections. There was no evidence for the involvement of the renin-angiotensin system in the pressor responses to intrathecal AVP, as (i) an angiotensin II receptor blocking agent, [Sar1, Val5, Ala8]angiotensin, failed to significantly alter the responses to intrathecal AVP, and (ii) plasma renin levels did not change following administration of the peptide. Intrathecal injections of [3H]AVP suggest that only small amounts of the peptide may cross into the plasma during the time in which the cardiovascular variables are changing. These data provide evidence that intrathecally administered AVP discretely activates the sympathetic outflow to the heart and vasculature, and confirm the neurally mediated nature of the response.  相似文献   

8.
郑坚  潘敬运 《生理学报》1991,43(4):330-337
The purpose of this study is to investigate the role of paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus (PVN) and alpha 1 adrenergic receptor of PVN in the pressor responses to stimulation of renal afferent nerve in alpha 1-chloralose-anesthetized cats with carotid sinoaortic denervation and vagotomy. The pressor response to stimulation of renal afferent nerve consisted of a primary and a second components. The primary component response was completely blocked while the second component was not blocked by autonomic blocking agents (hexomethonium and atropine). Bilateral lesions of PVN greatly attenuated the pressor response before and after autonomic blockade. Intracerebroventricular and PVN injection alpha 1, adrenergic antagonist (prazosin) significantly decreased in the pressor response to stimulation of renal afferent nerve. These results indicate that paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus and alpha 1 adrenergic receptors in central nervous system, especially in PVN, play an important role in the pressor responses to stimulation of renal afferent nerve.  相似文献   

9.
Electrical stimulation of the locus coeruleus in anesthetized rats evoked a biphasic pressor response consisting of an initial sharp rise in blood pressure at the onset of stimulation, followed by a second elevation after cessation of the stimulus. This response, which was accompanied by an increase in plasma noradrenaline and adrenaline levels, was stable and could be easily reproduced over time. Sympathectomy by administration of guanethidine selectively abolished the primary pressor response. beta-Adrenergic blockade by intravenous administration of sotalol enhanced the secondary pressor response without affecting the primary component. Adrenal demedullation performed 24-48 h before the experiments selectively prevented the secondary pressor component. In contrast, acute adrenalectomy carried out during the experiment to impair the adrenomedullary secretions eliminated the secondary pressor response to stimulation of the locus coeruleus only in sympathectomized or in sotalol-treated rats but not in intact rats in which the response persisted. The latter, however, could be abolished by the administration of either guanethidine or sotalol, and it disappeared following repeated stimulation of the locus coeruleus. The study demonstrates that similar poststimulatory pressor responses with different underlying mechanisms can be elicited on excitation of the locus coeruleus before and after acute adrenalectomy in the rat. The results also suggest that intraneuronal adrenaline may be involved in the response evoked in acutely adrenalectomized animals.  相似文献   

10.
Summary The effects of intracerebroventricular (icv) injections of angiotensin II (ANG II) on water intake, blood pressure, heart rate, and plasma arginine-vasopressin (AVP) concentration were studied in chronically instrumented adult male Syrian golden hamsters (Mesocricetus auratus). Furthermore, the effects of pharmacological ganglionic blockade, and of vascular AVP receptor blockade, on central ANG II-induced cardiovascular responses were investigated. ANG II (1, 10, and 100 ng, icv) elicited dose-dependent increases in water intake and arterial blood pressure. Heart rate showed a biphasic response with a short initial non dose-dependent tachycardic and a subsequent longer lasting bradycardic phase. Plasma AVP concentration was increased two and a half fold with 100 ng ANG II icv. Both ganglionic blockade and vascular AVP receptor blockade significantly attenuated the central ANG II-induced pressor response. The tachycardic phase of the heart rate response was abolished by ganglionic blockade and the bradycardic phase was significantly diminished by AVP receptor blockade. The results support the hypothesis that brain ANG II may participate in the central control of body fluid volume and in central cardiovascular regulation in conscious hamsters.  相似文献   

11.
In an experimental in vivo model to study gastropyloric motility in the cat a contraction of the stomach and the pyloric sphincter was regularly obtained in animals subjected to electrical vagal nerve stimulation or local intraarterial (i.a.) injection of substance P (SP). Much more infrequently contractile motor responses were recorded at splanchnic nerve stimulation. The contractile effects of SP were sensitive to atropine or local infusion of a SP analogue, (d-Pro2,d-Trp7,9)-SP, indicating that SP activated a final common cholinergic neuron in both stomach and pylorus. However, there seemed to be separate transmission mechanisms in these two regions based on the results of the physiological studies. The vagally induced pyloric contraction was noncholinergic, nonadrenergic, but sensitive to ganglionic blockade (hexamethonium) or the SP analogue, indicating involvement of SP in a peptidergic pathway to the sphincter. The infrequent splanchnically induced pyloric contraction was sensitive to atropine, the SP analogue or ganglionic blockade (hexamethonium) in favour of SP acting on a final cholinergic neuron in this system. On the other hand the gastric contraction, obtained at either extrinsic nerve stimulations or local i.a. injection of SP, was sensitive to atropine or the SP analogue but hexamethonium resistant. These findings suggest antidromic activation of SP-containing axon collaterals of the extrinsic nerves terminating on cholinergic neurons of the gastric wall. When afferent C-fibres of the vagal nerve were selectively activated by local heating, pyloric contraction and gastric relaxation were obtained via vago-vagal reflexes. After cervical vagotomy heating of the distal end of the vagal nerve elicited a gastric contraction, previously demonstrated to be atropine sensitive and hexamethonium resistant, but no pyloric motor response. This suggests that the antidromic activation mechanism was present only in the stomach, not in the pylorus.  相似文献   

12.
Increased dietary sodium enhances both excitatory and inhibitory blood pressure responses to stimulation of the central sympathetic nervous system (SNS) centers. In addition, long-term (hours to days) administration of ANG II increases blood pressure by activation of the SNS. These studies investigated the effects of increased dietary sodium on SNS control of blood pressure during 0- to 24-h infusion of ANG II in conscious, male rats consuming either tap water or isotonic saline (Iso) for 2 to 3 wk. The SNS component (evaluated by ganglionic blockade with trimetaphan) of both control blood pressure and the pressor response to intravenous ANG II was reduced in Iso animals. Furthermore, although the pressor response to intravenous ANG II infusion was similar between groups, the baroreflex-induced bradycardia during the initial 6 h of ANG II infusion was significantly greater, whereas the tachycardia accompanying longer infusion periods was significantly attenuated in Iso animals. These data suggest that in normal rats increased dietary sodium enhances sympathoinhibitory responses during intravenous ANG II.  相似文献   

13.
The roles of the autonomic nervous system, renin-angiotensin system, and arginine vasopressin (AVP) during the onset of ACTH-induced hypertension were investigated in conscious sheep. Autonomic ganglion blockade or combined adrenergic and cholinergic receptor blockade demonstrated that an intact sympathetic nervous system was not essential for the development or maintenance of the hypertension. Autonomic blockade augmented the pressor response to ACTH, indicating that baroreceptor-mediated reflexes normally operate to suppress the degree of hypertension produced by ACTH. Evidence was obtained suggesting that the renin-angiotensin system and AVP may partially contribute to the maintenance of ACTH hypertension in the presence of autonomic blockade. However, the precise mechanism by which ACTH raises arterial pressure remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

14.
To investigate the role of the autonomic nervous system in controlling insulin secretion 13 normal subjects and 5 patients with heart failure underwent insulin secretion tests. Alpha-adrenergic stimulation and beta-receptor blockade significantly depressed the secretion of insulin in response to intravenous tolbutamide in normal subjects, while both alpha-blockade and beta-stimulation significantly increased the insulin secretion response in both normal subjects and patients in heart failure. Parasympathetic stimulation and blockade had no significant effect on the insulin secretion response. These findings suggest that drugs that block the alpha-adrenergic receptors or stimulate the beta-adrenergic receptors by their ability to counteract the insulin suppression resulting from increased sympathetic nervous activity may play a vital metabolic part in the deranged metabolism of the failing heart in addition to their direct haemodynamic benefits.  相似文献   

15.
Renewed interest in the use of the embryonic chicken as a model of perinatal cardiovascular regulation has inspired new questions about the control mechanisms that respond to acute perturbations, such as hypoxia. The objectives of this study were to determine the cardiovascular responses, the regulatory mechanisms involved in those cardiovascular responses, and whether those mechanisms involved the central nervous system (CNS) of embryonic chickens. Heart rate (f(H)) and blood pressure were measured in chicken embryos of different incubation ages during exposure to different levels of hypoxia (15, 10, and 5% O(2)). At all levels of hypoxia and at all developmental ages, a depression of f(H) and arterial pressure was observed, with the exception of day 20 embryos in 15 and 10% O(2). The intensity of the embryonic f(H) and blood pressure responses were directly related to the level of hypoxia used. Muscarinic and alpha-adrenergic receptor stimulation limited the hypoxic hypotension on days 15-19 and 15-21, respectively, as indicated after blockade with atropine and phentolamine. During the final 3 days of incubation, the intensity of the hypoxic hypotension was magnified due to alpha-vasodilation caused by beta-adrenergic and muscarinic receptor stimulation. In 19- to 21-day-old embryos, the f(H) response to hypoxia was limited by alpha-adrenergic receptor stimulation as indicated by the accentuated bradycardia after blockade with phentolamine. Furthermore, on day 21, atropine limited the hypoxic bradycardia, indicating that muscarinic receptors also play a role in the f(H) response at this age. In addition, the muscarinic actions on the heart and the adrenergic effects on the vasculature appeared to occur through a hypoxic-induced direct release from chromaffin tissue and autonomic nerve terminals. Thus, in embryonic chickens, the only cardiovascular response to hypoxia that involves the CNS was the cholinergic regulation of arterial pressure after day 15 of incubation. Therefore, although embryonic chickens and fetal sheep, the standard models of perinatal cardiovascular physiology, respond to hypoxia with a similar redistribution of cardiac output, the underlying mechanisms differ between these species.  相似文献   

16.
The purpose of this study was to develop a dynamic exercise model in the rat that could be used to study central nervous system control of the cardiovascular system. Rats of both sexes were decerebrated under halothane anesthesia and prepared for induced locomotion on a freely turning wheel. Electrical stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR) elicited locomotion at different speeds and gait patterns and increased heart rate and blood pressure. Two maneuvers were performed to illustrate the potential use of the preparation. The first maneuver consisted of muscular paralysis, which prevents excitation of muscle mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors resulting from exercise. MLR stimulation still increased blood pressure. The second maneuver was performed to determine whether the blood pressure response obtained during paralysis was an artifact of electrical stimulation of the MLR. After microinjection of gamma-aminobutyric acid into the MLR, electrical current thresholds for blood pressure and locomotion increased in parallel. gamma-Aminobutyric acid injection also reduced the pressor response to suprathreshold electrical stimulation by 76%. The injection results suggest that electrical stimulation of the MLR activates cells rather than fibers of passage. The blood pressure response of the exercise model is probably not an artifact of stimulation. The decerebrate rat locomotor preparation should offer another approach to investigate difficult problems in exercise physiology.  相似文献   

17.
To examine the role of neural factors in the control of coronary vasoactivity in conscious animals, dogs were supplied with miniature pressure gauges in the aorta and left ventricle (to measure aortic and left ventricular pressures, respectively and with a flow probe on the left circumflex coronary artery (to measure coronary blood flow). The experiments were conducted several weeks after recovery from operation. Stimulation of the carotid chemoreceptor and pulmonary inflation elicited a biphasic reflex response. Initially, coronary vasodilation was observed; coronary blood flow tripled even after changes in metabolic factors were minimized by pretreatment with propranolol. A similar response occurred after a spontaneous deep breath. The coronary vasodilation could be blocked by alpha-adrenergic receptor blockade. The second phase of the response involved an increase in coronary vascular resistance, associated with elevated arterial pressure and an absolute reduction in coronary blood flow and coronary sinus oxygen content. The secondary coronary vasoconstriction was also abolished by alpha-adrenergic blockade. Paradoxically, alpha-adrenergic receptor blockade with phentolamine (at constant heart rate and after beta-adrenergic receptor blockade) did not increase coronary blood flow and reduced coronary vascular resistance only slightly. Selective alpha 1-adrenergic receptor blockade with prazosin and trimazosin on different days induced progressively greater reductions in coronary vascular resistance. Trimazosin was the only alpha-adrenergic receptor blocker to elevate coronary blood flow significantly. It is conceivable, but speculative, that withdrawal of alpha-adrenergic tone may involve activation of an intermediate agent, which is a potent coronary vasodilator. Alternatively, withdrawal of alpha-adrenergic tone may be an important mechanism for immediate control of the coronary circulation, but under more chronic conditions it plays a lesser role as a result of suppression by metabolic factors.  相似文献   

18.
Somatosympathetic reflexes were studied in young hyperinsulinemic, insulin-resistant (Zucker fatty) rats (ZFR) and a related control (Zucker lean) strain (ZLR). Glucose metabolism was characterized by minimal model analysis of intravenous glucose tolerance test data. Seven-week-old ZFR (n=18) and ZLR (n=17) were studied under pentobarbital anesthesia. Mean body weight and plasma glucose and insulin concentration were significantly greater (P<0.05) in ZFR than in ZLR, whereas basal values of mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR) were not significantly different. Increments of MAP (DeltaMAP) and HR (DeltaHR) elicited by electrical stimulation of the sciatic nerve (5-s trains of 100 pulses, 0.5-ms pulse duration, 100- to 400-microA pulse intensity) were significantly higher (ANOVA, P<0.05) in ZFR at each level of stimulus intensity. Regression analysis showed a linear increase in DeltaMAP and DeltaHR with increasing sciatic nerve stimulus intensity. Pressor responses to phenylephrine after ganglionic blockade demonstrated that vascular reactivity to adrenergic stimulation is not increased in ZFR compared with ZLR. Thus this factor does not contribute to enhancement of somatosympathetic reflexes observed in this strain. Insulin sensitivity in ZFR was one-fourth (P<0.05) that in ZLR. These results suggest that stronger sympathetic nervous reactivity in ZFR is associated with a severe insulin-resistant state before the onset of hypertension and support the hypothesis that insulin-mediated stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system is involved in the development of cardiovascular diseases related to alterations of glucose metabolism.  相似文献   

19.
Experiments were designed to determine the influence of endothelin A (ET(A)) receptors on the pressor response to acute environmental stress in Dahl salt-resistant (DR) and Dahl-sensitive (DS) rats. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) was chronically monitored by telemetry before and after treatment with the selective ET(A) receptor antagonist ABT-627. Rats were restrained and subjected to pulsatile air jet stress (3 min). In untreated animals, the total pressor response (area under the curve) to acute stress was not different between DR vs. DS rats (8.1 +/- 1.7 vs. 15.6 +/- 2.6 mmHg x 3 min, P = 0.10). Conversely, treatment with ABT-627 potentiated the total pressor response only in DR rats (36.3 +/- 6.2 vs. 22.6 +/- 5.9 mmHg x 3 min, DR vs. DS, P < 0.05). Treatment with ABT-627 allowed greater responses in anesthetized DR rats to exogenous phenylephrine (1-4 microg/kg) during ganglionic blockade (P < 0.05) and produced a significant increase in plasma norepinephrine at baseline and during stress in conscious DR rats compared with untreated animals (P < 0.05). ET(A) receptor blockade had no effect on these responses in DS rats. Our results suggest that endothelin-1 can inhibit alpha-adrenergic-mediated effects in DR, but not DS rats, consistent with the hypothesis that ET(A) receptor activation functions to reduce sympathetic nerve activity and responses in vascular smooth muscle to sympathetic stimulation.  相似文献   

20.
Specific receptor antagonists were used to examine the role of endothelin-1 (ET-1) in the erectile response of the rat. In these studies, intact rats were cannulated to permit the continuous recording of mean arterial pressure (MAP) and intracavernosal pressure (CCP). Erection was induced by electrical stimulation of the autonomic ganglion, which regulates blood flow to the penis. The animals were subjected to intracavernosal injection with vehicle only (Cont) or with an antagonist to the endothelin-A receptor (ET(A)) or to the endothelin-B receptor (ET(B)). Blockade of the ET(A) or the ET(B) had no effect on the erectile response (CCP/MAP) during maximal ganglionic stimulation. When ET-1 was injected into Cont rats, there was a marked vasoconstriction with a sharp rise in MAP and a decline in CCP as the cavernosal arterioles constricted and limited inflow. The injection of the ET(A) antagonist prevented the vasoconstriction after ET-1 injection into Cont rats, whereas blockade of the ET(B) had no effect on the vasoconstrictive effect to ET-1. Similar results were obtained during submaximal ganglionic stimulation. With minimal levels of ganglionic stimulation, ET-1 injection led to a moderated degree of vasodilation in the presence of the ET(A) antagonist. The ET(B) antagonist failed to alter the CCP response during minimal stimulation, but it did have a marked effect on the MAP response to ET-1 injection. The results of these studies confirm that cavernosal tissue of the rat penis is highly responsive to ET-1. However, the failure of the ET-1 antagonists to affect penile erection in response to ganglionic stimulation reflects a minimal role of ET-1 in the erectile response in the rat.  相似文献   

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