Central Actions of Agmatine in Conscious Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats
Autor: | S. Briaud, F. Sannajust, B. L. Zhang |
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Rok vydání: | 2005 |
Předmět: |
Male
Agonist medicine.medical_specialty Agmatine Consciousness Arginine Physiology medicine.drug_class Movement Adrenergic Imidazoline receptor Blood Pressure Rilmenidine Cardiovascular System Clonidine chemistry.chemical_compound Heart Rate Rats Inbred SHR Internal medicine Internal Medicine medicine Animals Drug Interactions Oxazoles Antihypertensive Agents Injections Intraventricular Dose-Response Relationship Drug business.industry Brain General Medicine Rats Endocrinology Blood pressure chemistry Hypertension business medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Clinical and Experimental Hypertension. 27:619-627 |
ISSN: | 1525-6006 1064-1963 |
DOI: | 10.1080/10641960500298632 |
Popis: | Agmatine (decarboxylated arginine) is an endogenous ligand at alpha-2 adrenergic and imidazoline nonadrenergic receptors. In conscious spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHRs), we have studied its central effects on cardiovascular function and its interaction with the second generation centrally acting antihypertensive agent, rilmenidine, and the reference imidazoline, clonidine, which are mixed alpha-2 adrenoceptor/imidazoline receptor agonists. Agmatine, when administered in low doses (30-100 microg/kg) into the fourth ventricle had no effect on blood pressure and caused an increase in heart rate. A higher dose of 1,000 microg/kg produced an adverse reaction in conscious SHRs and a marked and long-lasting increase in blood pressure. The effects of fourth ventricular rilmenidine (300 microg/kg) and clonidine (10 microg/kg) were equihypotensive and equibradycardic. The antihypertensive and bradycardic effects of rilmenidine were not reversed by cumulative intracisternal doses (30-100-300 microg/kg) of agmatine. The bradycardia obtained 20 min after intracisternal administration of clonidine in the fourth ventricle was reversed by 30 microg/kg agmatine. Only the highest dose of agmatine (1,000 microg/kg) did reverse the antihypertensive effects of rilmenidine and clonidine. Agmatine neither did mimic nor block the antihypertensive response to rilmenidine and clonidine at well-tolerated doses. Yet agmatine produced a small tachycardia at relatively low doses and was able to reverse the bradycardia induced by clonidine. Therefore, its affinity for alpha-2 adrenoceptors in vitro might partially explain its cardiovascular effects in vivo. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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