首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到3条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
An in vivo model is described in which pentobarbital anaesthetized pigs were used to study the sympathetic nervous control of the nasal mucosal vascular bed. Changes in blood flow in the sphenopalatine artery (representing nasal blood flow) and in the volume of the nasal cavity (mainly reflecting blood content in venous sinusoids), upon electrical stimulation of the cervical sympathetic trunk, were recorded simultaneously. Single impulses (15V, 5 ms) reduced both the arterial flow and the volume of the nasal mucosa. The effects of nerve stimulation with a continuous train of impulses at 0.59, 2 and 6.9 Hz were compared with those caused by stimulation with the irregular bursting pattern, triggered by recorded human sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerve activity, with the same average frequencies. Both types of stimulation reduced nasal blood flow and volume, but the responses were significantly larger with burst stimulation at 0.59 Hz. The volume reduction was already maximal at 0.59 Hz while the blood flow response increased further higher frequencies. Local intra-arterial pretreatment with the alpha-adrenoceptor antagonist phenoxybenzamine significantly attenuated the flow and volume responses to single impulses, while clear-cut reductions in blood flow (by 40%) and volume (by 80%) remained, upon stimulation, at 6.9 Hz. Noradrenaline given intra-arterially caused a dose-dependent reduction in nasal blood flow and volume. The noradrenaline effects were blocked by phenoxybenzamine treatment. The results show that the pig nasal mucosa represents a model where both blood flow and volume changes can be studied in parallel in vivo.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
The overflows of noradrenaline (NA) and neuropeptide Y like immunoreactivity (NPYLI) and vascular responses upon sympathetic nerve stimulation were analysed in the nasal mucosa of pentobarbital anaesthetized pigs. In controls, a frequency-dependent increase in NA overflow was observed whereas detectable release of NPY-LI occurred only at 6.9 Hz. Parallel decreases in blood flow in the sphenopalatine artery and vein and in nasal mucosa volume (reflecting blood volume in the venous sinusoids) were observed. The laser Doppler flowmeter signal (reflecting superficial blood flow) increased upon low and decreased upon high frequency stimulation. Twenty-four hours after reserpine pretreatment and preganglionic decentralization, the NA overflow was abolished while a frequency-dependent release of NPY-LI occurred. Forty, 60 and 80% of the vasoconstrictor responses then remained upon stimulation with a single impulse, 0.59 and 6.9 Hz, respectively. Both the vasoconstriction and NPY-LI overflow, however, were subjected to fatigue upon repeated stimulation. In reserpinized animals release of NPY-LI and vasoconstrictor responses were larger upon stimulation with irregular bursts at 0.59 Hz compared to effects seen at stimulation with continuous impulses. Pre-treatment with the a-adrenoceptor antagonist phenoxybenzamine or the monoamine reuptake inhibitor, desipramine, enhanced NA overflow by 2–3 and 1.5 times at 0.59 and 6.9 Hz, respectively. Phenoxybenzamine significantly reduced the nerve-evoked vascular responses while the release of NPY-LI at 6.9 Hz was increased. Desipramine increased the functional responses but reduced the NPY-LI overflow. During tachyphylaxis to the vasoconstrictor effects of the stable adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) analogue α-β-methylene ATP (mATP) in controls, the vasoconstrictor responses as well as the NA and NPY-LI overflow to nerve stimulation were unmodified. In reserpinized animals, however, the vascular responses and the overflow of NPY-LI were reduced after mATP tachyphylaxis. These data show that both NA and NPY are released upon sympathetic nerve stimulation in the nasal mucosa in vivo and this release seems to be regulated via prejunctional a-adrenoceptors. The lack of effect of mATP tachyphylaxis under control conditions makes it less likely that ATP serves as a major mediator of the large nonadrenergic vasoconstrictor component.  相似文献   

3.
The possible occurrence of non-adrenergic mechanisms in the sympathetic vascular control of the nasal mucosa was studied in vivo using reserpine-treated pigs (1 mg kg-1, i.v., 24 h earlier) in combination with pharmacological blockade of alpha-adrenoceptors by local phenoxybenzamine (1 mg kg-1, i.a.) infusion. The nasal mucosal depletion (99%) of the content of noradrenaline (NA) in reserpinized animals was not influenced by preganglionic denervation while the depletion (44%) of neuropeptide Y (NPY) was prevented. Upon stimulation with single shocks, 25% of the arterial blood flow reduction and 47% of the nasal mucosal volume reduction (reflecting contraction of venous sinusoids) were still present after reserpine as compared with controls. In reserpinized animals, the vascular responses were slow developing and long-lasting, and about 60% remained at 0.59 Hz and more than 80% at 6.9 Hz. The vascular effects after reserpine were, however, subjected to fatigue, which may explain why phenoxybenzamine treatment still reduced the functional effects in the absence of NA. Local intra-arterial injections of NA, NPY and the metabolically stable adenosine-5'-triphosphate analogue alpha, beta-methylene ATP (mATP) caused reduction in both arterial blood flow and nasal mucosal volume. The C-terminal fragment of NPY (NPY 13-36) also induced nasal vasoconstriction although with a fivefold lower potency than NPY 1-36. Adenosine-5'-triphosphate caused a biphasic vascular effect with vasodilatatory actions at low doses and a short-lasting vasoconstriction followed by vasodilatation at very high doses (100-fold higher than the threshold response to mATP). In contrast to the response to NA, the long-lasting vascular effects of NPY and mATP were resistant to phenoxybenzamine treatment. In conclusion, although NA is likely to mediate most of the sympathetic vascular responses to low-frequency stimulation in the pig nasal mucosa, a large resistance and capacitance vessel component upon high-frequency stimulation seems to be non-adrenergic and mimicked by NPY rather than ATP.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号