Prazosin and presynaptic alpha-receptors in the cardioaccelerator nerve of the dog. |
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Authors: | J W Constantine R A Weeks W K McShane |
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Affiliation: | Department of Pharmacology, Central Research Division, Pfizer Inc., Groton, CT 06340, U.S.A. |
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Abstract: | In vagotomized, spinal-sectioned dogs, prazosin and phentolamine enhanced positive chronotropic responses to cardiac accelerator nerve stimulation. In additional dogs the inhibition by clonidine of heart rate response to continuous accelerator nerve stimulation (presynaptic effect), and the vasopressor effect of clonidine (post-synaptic effect), were antagonized by prazosin, phentolamine and yohimbine; cumulative doses for 50% antagonism of the cardiac chronotropic effect were 103, 50 and 13 microgram/kg i.v., respectively, and those for 50% antagonism of the vasopressor effect were 39, 38 and 3 microgram/kg i.v., respectively. On isolated rabbit pulmonary artery, prazosin antagonized electrically evoked contractions but had no effect on 3H output, whereas yohimbine enhanced both. The results indicate that prazosin, like phentolamine and yohimbine, blocks presynaptic alpha-adrenergic receptors on the cardiac accelerator nerve of the dog but, unlike yohimbine, prazosin does not block these receptors on noradrenergic nerves of rabbit pulmonary artery. It is concluded that the relative activity of a compound at pre- and postsynaptic alpha-receptors is not the same for all organs. The results are discussed relative to the fact that prazosin causes hypotension without significant reflex tachycardia in dog and man. |
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Keywords: | Cardiac accelerator nerve of dogs Presynaptic α-receptors Yohimbine Clonidine Rabbit pulmonary artery Phentolamine Prazosin |
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