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Influence of atropine on the cardiovascular effects of noradrenaline and tyramine in elder volunteers
Authors:U. Poller  R. F. Schäfers  S. Schmuck  J. Jakubetz  J. Radke  A. E. Daul  K. Pönicke  O.-E. Brodde
Affiliation:(1) Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Martin-Luther-University of Halle-Wittenberg, D-06097 Halle/Saale, Germany, DE;(2) Department of Nephrology and Hypertension, University of Essen, D-45122 Essen, Germany, DE;(3) Department of Anaesthesiology, Martin-Luther-University of Halle-Wittenberg, D-06097 Halle/Saale, Germany, DE
Abstract:The aim of this study, carried out in six elder healthy volunteers (mean age: 61 years), was to determine the influence of muscarinic receptor blockade with atropine (15 µg/kg i.v. loading dose followed by 0.15 µg/kg/min by i.v. infusion) on the effects of i.v. infusions of noradrenaline (5 incremental doses of 10-120 ng/kg/min) or tyramine, that releases endogenous noradrenaline (4 incremental doses of 5-20 µg/kg/min), on blood pressure, heart rate and systolic time intervals (STI’s, as a measure of positive inotropism). These results were compared with those recently published for young healthy volunteers (mean age: 26 years; Schäfers et al. 1997). Noradrenaline caused increases in systolic and diastolic blood pressure, decreases in heart rate and a shortening of STI’s that were not different from those in young volunteers. Atropine did not significantly affect these hemodynamic responses to noradrenaline, while in young volunteers it significantly enhanced noradrenaline-induced blood pressure increases and converted the heart rate decrease into an increase. In the present study in elder volunteers, tyramine caused a smaller increase in systolic blood pressure than in the previous study in young volunteers; in addition, it slightly increased diastolic blood pressure while it decreased diastolic blood pressure in young volunteers. Atropine did not significantly affect the hemodynamic effects of tyramine in the elder volunteers, while in the young volunteers it enhanced the increase in systolic blood pressure and converted the decreases in diastolic blood pressure and heart rate into increases. These results indicate a) that ageing is accompanied by a blunted baroreflex-mediated parasympathetic activation resulting in reduced cholinergic vasodilation and decreases in heart rate, and b) that ageing is associated with a decreased responsiveness of (cardiac) β-adrenoceptors and (vascular) α1-adrenoceptors which is only unmasked when the counterregulatory action of parasympathetic activation is removed.
Keywords:Noradrenaline (i.v.)  Tyramine (i.v.)  Adrenoceptors  Muscarinic receptors  Ageing
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