Abstract: | The effect of phentolamine, an alpha-adrenergic blocker, on hepatic oxygen supply, plasma glucose, and lactate, and survival in fasted male rats administered Echerichia coli endotoxin (25 mg/kg, ip) has been studied. Survival at 24 h was 8% in untreated endotoxic rats, 83% in rats receiving phentolamine (5 mg/kg, ip) and endotoxin, and 100% in phentolamine controls. Measurements during the initial 8 h postendotoxin recorded transiently lower systemic arterial pressure in the phentolamine-endotoxic rats. Arterial PO2 and increases of pH and heart rate were similar in both endotoxic groups. Lactacidemia, present by 4 h in untreated endotoxic rats, did not develop in the phentolamine group and plasma glucose was significantly higher at 8 h (98 +/- 2.5 vs. 77 +/- 5.6 mg%, mean +/- SE). Mean hepatic PO2 at 6 h in phentolamine-endotoxic rats was 9.6 mmHg with 28% of the values below 5 mmHg. By contrast, the mean in untreated endotoxic rats was 1.9 mmHg with 88% of values below 5 mmHg. Phentolamine controls were stable over 8 h; mean hepatic PO2 was 17.7 mmHg. The differences in plasma glucose and lactate suggest protection of hepatic metabolism in phentolamine-treated endotoxic rats by prevention of excessive hepatic hypoxia. |