Enkephalin modulation of neural transmission in the cat stellate ganglion: pharmacological actions of exogenous opiates
Autor: | Alfredo Gorio, Marco Prosdocimi, M. Finesso |
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Rok vydání: | 1986 |
Předmět: |
Male
Postganglionic nerve fibers medicine.medical_specialty Physiology Enkephalin Methionine Stimulation Synaptic Transmission Heart Rate Internal medicine Muscarinic acetylcholine receptor Animals Medicine Ganglia Sympathetic Morphine business.industry General Neuroscience (4-(m-Chlorophenylcarbamoyloxy)-2-butynyl)trimethylammonium Chloride Enkephalins Sympathetic ganglion Electric Stimulation Compound muscle action potential Ganglion medicine.anatomical_structure Endocrinology Stellate ganglion Cats Female Neurology (clinical) Dimethylphenylpiperazinium Iodide Opiate business Enkephalin Leucine Histamine |
Zdroj: | Journal of the Autonomic Nervous System. 17:217-230 |
ISSN: | 0165-1838 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0165-1838(86)90059-7 |
Popis: | Neural ganglionic transmission was studied in vivo in the cat, using closed chest anesthetized preparations. The right stellate ganglion and its branches were exposed retropleurally and prepared for electrical stimulation of pre- and postganglionic nerve fibers. The axillary artery was cannulated allowing direct administration of drugs in the arterial blood supplying the ganglion. Stimulation of postjunctional receptors could thus be obtained by local administration of selective agents. Local administration of nicotinic, muscarinic or histaminergic agents increased heart rate and blood pressure. Opiates were given either i.v. or locally through the axillary artery: we tested the effects of morphine, Leu-enkephalin (Leu-enk), Met-enkephalin (Met-enk), [D-ala2]-Met-enkephalinamide (DAME) and etorphine. When given locally, Leu-enk (from 10 micrograms), Met-enk (from 20 micrograms), DAME (from 5 micrograms) and etorphine (from 0.2 micrograms) inhibited tachycardia induced by preganglionic stimulation and reduced the amplitude of the compound action potential recorded from the postganglionic nerve. Morphine (10-200 micrograms) had no effect. On the other hand, tachycardia induced by postganglionic nerve stimulation was unaffected by opiates in the same experimental conditions. Intravenous administration of similar doses of opiates had no effect on ganglionic transmission. When tachycardia was induced by chemical stimulation of nicotinic (DMPP), muscarinic (McN-A-343-11) or histamine receptors in the stellate ganglia, opiates were still active in reducing the effect of these chemicals. These data provide evidence that exogenous opiates exert a depressing action on postsynaptic responses of sympathetic ganglia tested in vivo, although an additional action on presynaptic terminals is not excluded. As endogenous opiates are normally present in various sympathetic ganglia, including the stellate ganglion of the cat, it is possible that they play some modulatory role on ganglionic transmission in physiological conditions. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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