The Journal of clinical investigation
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
The cardiovascular effects of morphine. The peripheral capacitance and resistance vessels in human subjects.
To evaluate the effects of morphine on the peripheral venous and arterial beds, 69 normal subjects were evaluated before and after the intravenous administration of 15 mg morphine. Venous tone was determined by three independent techniques in 22 subjects. The venous pressure measured in a hand vein during temporary circulatory arrest (isolated hand vein technique) fell from 20.2+/-1.4 to 13.4+/-0.9 mm Hg (P < 0.01) 10 min after morphine, indicating that a significant venodilation had occurred. ⋯ Intra-arterial promethazine, atropine, and propranolol did not block the forearm arteriolar dilator response to intravenous morphine; however, intra-arterial phentolamine abolished the response. These data suggest that in human subjects, morphine induces a peripheral venous and arteriolar dilation by a reflex reduction in sympathetic alpha adrenergic tone. Morphine does not appear to act as a peripheral alpha adrenergic blocking agent but seems to attenuate the sympathetic efferent discharge at a central nervous system level.
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Comparative Study
Mechanisms mediating bradycardia during coronary arteriography.
Cardiac slowing occurring during diagnostic coronary arteriography was studied in 78 patients. Comparable degrees of slowing occurred with injections into the right and into the left coronary arteries into the contralateral artery, and with injections into the coronary artery giving rise to the sinus node artery and into the contralateral artery. Rapid intracoronary injections of isosmotic dextrose solution produced significantly less slowing than comparable injections of contrast medium. ⋯ Arterial pressure did not change in three patients. This study suggests that the cardiac slowing which occurs during coronary arteriography in man is due primarily to a cholinergic reflex which may be a human counterpart of the Bezold-Jarisch reflex, observed heretofore only in experimental animals. This slowing appears to be mediated primarily by receptors sensitive to contrast medium, rather than by changes of coronary artery pressure, and secondarily, by direct depression of sinus node function by contrast medium.
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In many previous studies, the natriuresis induced by saline loading has been demonstrated to persist even though glomerular filtration rate (GFR) has been decreased to below pre-expansion levels by a reduction in renal artery pressure. In such studies, however, the kidney has been exposed to the effects of volume expansion for varying periods of time before renal artery pressure was controlled. The present experiments were designed to evaluate whether this period of exposure induces critical changes in intrarenal factors that are responsible for the natriuresis. ⋯ During the period of reduced renal artery pressure, however, neither interstitial pressure nor renal plasma flow was detectably increased above control in either the immediate or the delayed clamping experiments. The only noteworthy difference between the experiments in which a natriuresis occurred (unclamped and delayed clamping studies) and the experiments in which no natriuresis occurred is that in the former group the kidney was at least transiently exposed both to an increase in renal plasma flow and interstitial pressure. These findings indicate, first, that extracellular fluid volume expansion can induce a natriuresis only if the kidney has been exposed to at least a transient increase in either interstitial hydrostatic pressure or renal plasma flow (or both); and, second, that a sustained increase in interstitial pressure and renal plasma flow is not required for the natriuresis to persist.
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The effects of isoproterenol, norepinephrine, dobutamine, exercise, and nitroglycerin on left ventricular diameter, pressure, velocity of shortening, dP/dt, dP/dt/P, arterial pressure, left circumflex coronary blood flow, and coronary vascular resistance were examined in healthy conscious dogs with normal coronary perfusion and in the same animals after moderate global ischemia had been induced by partial occlusion of the left main coronary artery. In the normal nonischemic heart, all interventions improved left ventricular performance, as evidenced by increases in dP/dt/P and velocity at the same or lower left ventricular end-diastolic diameter. ⋯ Dobutamine, which did not alter heart rate or arterial pressure substantially while improving myocardial contractility, produced an intermediate response between that of norepinephrine and isoproterenol in the presence of moderate global myocardial ischemia. Thus, interventions that increase myocardial O(2) requirements, by increasing heart rate and myocardial contractility without augmenting coronary perfusion pressure, can produce a paradoxical depression of ventricular function in the presence of global myocardial ischemia.
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Serum immunoreactive parathyroid hormone (iPTH) and plasma total calcium, ionized calcium, magnesium, and phosphorus levels were determined during the first 9 days of life in 137 normal term infants, 55 "sick" infants, and 43 hypocalcemic (Ca <7.5 mg/100 ml; Ca(++)<4.0 mg/100 ml) infants. In the cord blood, elevated levels of plasma Ca(++) and Ca were observed, while levels of serum iPTH were either undetectable or low. In normal newborns during the first 48 h of life there was a decrease in plasma Ca and Ca(++), while the serum iPTH level in most samples remained undetectable or low; after 48 h there were parallel increases in plasma Ca and Ca(++) and serum iPTH levels. ⋯ The net effect of unknown plasma hypocalcemic factor(s) on the one hand and parathyroid activity on the other may account for differences in plasma Ca levels observed between normal, sick, and hypocalcemic infants. Depressed plasma Mg is frequently present in hypocalcemic infants. To what degree the hypomagnesemia reflects parathyroid insufficiency or the converse, to what degree parathyroid insufficiency and hypocalcemia are secondary to hypomagnesemia, is uncertain.