Canadian journal of physiology and pharmacology
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Can. J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Oct 1989
Hemodynamic effects of a combination of clonidine and propranolol in conscious cirrhotic rats.
The hemodynamic effects of the combination of clonidine and propranolol were studied in conscious rats with portal hypertension owing to secondary biliary cirrhosis. Pressure and blood flow measurements (radioactive microsphere method) were performed in three groups of eight rats before and after drug administration. The combined effects of clonidine (2 micrograms/100 g body wt., i.v.) and propranolol (0.2 mg/min for 10 min) were compared with those observed after administration of either clonidine alone or propranolol alone. ⋯ These findings indicate that the combination of clonidine and propranolol is more effective for reversing splanchnic hemodynamic changes than clonidine alone or propranolol alone. The additive effects of this association are in agreement with the action of clonidine and propranolol at different levels (central and peripheral) and on different receptors (alpha and beta). It suggests that an increase in sympathetic activity may play a major role in hemodynamic changes observed in experimental cirrhosis.
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Can. J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Sep 1989
Effects of hyperbaric oxygen in circulatory shock induced by splanchnic artery occlusion and reperfusion in rats.
We studied the effects of hyperbaric oxygen in a severe model of circulatory shock induced by occlusion and reperfusion of major splanchnic arteries (splanchnic artery occlusion (SAO) shock). Pentobarbital-anesthetized rats subjected to total occlusion of the superior mesenteric and the celiac arteries for 40 min developed a severe shock state, resulting in a uniformly fatal outcome after release of the occlusion. Exposure to hyperbaric oxygen at 2 ATA (atmosphere absolute) (1 ATA = 0.1 MPa) was initiated immediately after reperfusion. ⋯ Treatment with hyperbaric oxygen attenuated the increase in plasma activities of the lysosomal hydrolase cathepsin D (p less than 0.05), and diminished the increase of hematocrit (p less than 0.01 from untreated shock rats). Splanchnic occlusion shock rats treated with hyperbaric oxygen also exhibited a significantly higher survival rate than the untreated shock group (77 vs. 0%, respectively; p less than 0.01). Our results suggest that the beneficial effects of exposure to hyperbaric oxygen immediately after reperfusion of the splanchnic region outweigh its possible deleterious effect.
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Can. J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Sep 1989
ReviewNew perspectives on cocaine addiction: recent findings from animal research.
Research with laboratory animals has provided several insights into the nature of cocaine abuse and addiction. First, the nature of drug addiction has been reevaluated and the emphasis has shifted from physical dependence to compulsive drug-taking behavior. Second, animal studies suggest that cocaine is at least as addictive as heroin and possibly even more addictive. ⋯ Fifth, although the biological consequences of repeated cocaine self-administration on central nervous system functioning are poorly understood, preliminary findings suggest that intravenous cocaine self-administration may decrease neural functioning in this brain reward system. This has important clinical implications because diminished functioning of an important brain reward system may significantly contribute to relapse into cocaine addiction. These and other findings from experimentation with laboratory animals suggest new considerations for the etiology and treatment of drug addiction.
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Can. J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · Sep 1989
Positive hemodynamic interaction between amrinone and diltiazem in anesthetized dogs.
The direct negative inotropic actions of calcium channel blockers limit the use of these otherwise effective systemic and coronary vasodilators in patients with heart failure. We studied the effects of amrinone pretreatment on the dose--hemodynamic response curve of diltiazem in order to test the hypothesis that amrinone might potentiate diltiazem's positive effects in anesthetized dogs. ⋯ We propose that amrinone, by inhibiting phosphodiesterase, potentiates diltiazem vasodilation and reflexly secreted catecholamines' actions on the heart. This positive interaction may permit effective use of lower doses of diltiazem, thus circumventing its dose-limiting direct negative effects while still profitting from beneficial peripheral, reflex, and coronary actions.
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Can. J. Physiol. Pharmacol. · May 1987
Acute effects of ethanol on baroreceptor reflex control of heart rate and on pressor and depressor responsiveness in rats.
In rats anesthetized with alpha-chloralose, doses of 0.1, 0.5, and 1 g/kg of ethanol produced an upward shift of baroreflex curves constructed by plotting the heart rate response against mean arterial pressure following evoked rises in mean arterial pressures by phenylephrine or angiotensin II. Whereas the upward shift of baroreceptor curves may be related, at least in part, to a higher base-line heart rate after ethanol, the data showed that the 1 g/kg dose of ethanol significantly depressed baroreflex sensitivity, suggesting that higher doses of ethanol impair baroreflex-mediated bradycardia. The phenylephrine, but not the angiotensin II or the nitroprusside, dose-response curves were shifted to the right after ethanol, indicating a decreased pressor responsiveness and suggesting that ethanol may have alpha-adrenergic blocking activity. ⋯ That this effect was not influenced by changes in baroreflex sensitivity was supported by the finding that a similar shift of the phenylephrine pressor-response curve was obtained in bilaterally vagotomized and hexamethonium-treated rats. Whether this effect of ethanol on baroreflex control of heart rate was influenced by anesthesia was investigated in conscious rats; the 1 g/kg dose of ethanol that produced the most significant decrease in baroreflex sensitivity was used in these experiments. Ethanol was still able to significantly inhibit baroreflex sensitivity in conscious rats, but the upward shift of the baroreflex curve and the elevated base-line heart rate no longer occurred.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)