Dopamine in the conscious dog with chronic heart-block |
| |
Authors: | Michel Boucher Claude Dubray Pierre Duchêne-Marullaz |
| |
Affiliation: | (1) Department of Pharmacology, U. 195 INSERM, Faculty of Medicine, F-63001 Clermont-Ferrand Cédex, France |
| |
Abstract: | Summary The chronotropic effects of dopamine were studied in the conscious dog with chronic A-V block. Dopamine at 12.5–200 g/kg and 12.5–50 g/kg/min lowered atrial rate independently of dose. After blockade of muscarine receptors or alpha-adrenoceptors, it raised atrial rate. After blockade of dopamine receptors, dopamine still lowered atrial rate, and did so dose-relatedly after blockade of beta-adrenoceptors. It raised ventricular rate, and at high doses also induced ventricular rhythm disorders. Blockade of muscarine receptors enhanced the ventricular cardioaccelerator effect of dopamine (P<0.025) at 100 g/kg, while blockade of alpha-adrenoceptors reduced it (P<0.05). Blockade of dopamine receptors did not modify this effect, but blockade of beta-adrenoceptors reversed it. Dopamine at 25–200 g/kg raised mean blood pressure. This effect was enhanced by blockade of muscarine receptors, reversed by blockade of alpha-adrenoceptors, and was unaffected by blockade of beta-adrenoceptors or dopamine receptors. These results show that the atrial cardiomoderator effect of dopamine is a vagal reflex response to its hypertensive action, and that it is limited by its direct beta-adrenergic stimulating action. They also show that the ventricular cardioaccelerator effect of dopamine is attenuated by a reflex vagal depressor effect consequent to the induced hypertension. No evidence was found for the existence of positive chronotropic dopamine receptors in either atria or ventricles.A preliminary report of these findings was presented at the Symposium on Peripheral Dopaminergic Receptors, July 1978, in Strasbourg, France (Boucher et al. 1979b) |
| |
Keywords: | Conscious A-V blocked dogs Atrial rate Ventricular rate Dopamine |
本文献已被 SpringerLink 等数据库收录! |
|