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Relaxant responses to transmural stimulation and nicotine of dog and monkey cerebral arteries
Authors:N Toda
Abstract:In helical strips of dog and monkey cerebral arteries contracted with prostaglandin F2 alpha, transmural stimulation and nicotine produced relaxations that were abolished by tetrodotoxin and hexamethonium, respectively. These responses were attenuated by quinidine, whereas relaxations of dog coronary arteries to transmural stimulation and isoproterenol were unaffected. Treatment with vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) and substance P (SP) abolished the relaxant response of cerebral arteries to repeated applications of VIP and SP, respectively; however, after VIP or SP, a normal relaxant response to transmural stimulation or nicotine was produced. Aminophylline suppressed relaxations induced by ATP but not by nerve stimulation. VIP, SP, and adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) relaxed dog cerebral arteries; the responses were unaffected by quinidine. However, only VIP and ATP relaxed monkey cerebral arteries, and SP contracted the arteries. Acetylcholine contracted monkey arteries, in which transmural stimulation produced a relaxation. It may be concluded that nerves innervating the cerebrospinal wall are stimulated electrically and chemically by nicotine, resulting in the arterial relaxation. However, a vasodilator transmitter was not identified. Quinidine appears to selectively antagonize the action of the transmitters on cerebroarterial smooth muscle.
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