Abstract: | 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. |