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RESEARCH PRODUCT
The Effects of Epinine on Arterial Blood Pressure and Regional Vascular Resistances in Anesthetized Rats
Vicente PalopFrancisco J. Morales-olivasL. EstañInocencia Martínez-mirElena Rubiosubject
medicine.medical_specialtymedicine.medical_treatmentHemodynamicsBlood PressureAntiarrhythmic agentUrethaneRenal CirculationHeart RateInternal medicinemedicinePrazosinAnimalsSplanchnic CirculationRats WistarPharmacologybusiness.industryBlood flowRatsDeoxyepinephrinemedicine.anatomical_structureBlood pressureEndocrinologyDopamine AgonistsCirculatory systemVascular resistanceVascular ResistanceSulpiridebusinessAnesthetics Intravenousmedicine.drugdescription
1. We carried out experiments in anesthetized rats to study the hemodynamic effects of intravenous injections of epinine. 2. Epinine (1-320 micrograms/kg) produced a biphasic effect on mean arterial blood pressure (n = 30). At doses lower than 40 micrograms/kg, arterial blood pressure decreased (by as much as 21.5 +/- 3.4%), though at higher doses it increased dose dependently (by as much as 73.2 +/- 14.5%). Epinine also produced bradicardia in a dose-dependent manner (by as much as 26.4 +/- 4.9%). Sulpiride (100 micrograms/kg) suppressed the hypotensive effect of epinine but did not change the hypertensive effect. In the presence of prazosin (1,000 micrograms/kg), arterial blood pressure remained significantly decreased at all doses of epinine. Neither sulpiride nor prazosin changed the bradycardic effect of epinine. 3. Prazosin produced a significant decrease in renal vascular resistance. Epinine (5 micrograms/kg) after prazosin reverted the effects of prazosin in renal vascular resistance, without any significant modification in the renal blood flows. However, 20 micrograms/kg epinine increased the renal vascular resistances and, moreover, produced a significant decrease in the blood flows of both kidneys. Neither prazosin nor epinine produced modifications in the intestinal vascular bed. 4. Although epinine possesses significant dopamine and alpha-adrenergic activities that are involved in the biphasic effect of the agent on mean arterial blood pressure in anesthetized rats, in the presence of prazosin, it is not possible to manifest dopaminergic activity involved in the increase in renal or mesenteric blood flow; this may be due to the low tone of the vascular wall induced by the alpha-adrenergic antagonist, though an alpha 2-activity cannot be discarded.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1998-05-22 | General Pharmacology: The Vascular System |