Author:
MacKenzie ET,McCulloch J,O'Kean M,Pickard JD,Harper AM
Abstract
The systemic administration of norepinephrine has minimal effects on the cerebral circulation, perhaps due to blood-brain barrier mechanisms. To test hypothesis, the cerebrovascular effects of norepinephrine beyond the blood-brain barrier were studied in anesthetized baboons, Intraventricular norepinephrine (40 mug/kg) resulted in significant increases in cerebral blood flow (40%), cerebral oxygen consumption (21%), and cerebral glucose uptake (153%). Intracarotid hypertonic urea opens the blood-brain barrier by osmotic disruption; Consequent to hypertonic urea, the intracarotid infusion of norepinephrine, 50 ng/kg-min, significantly increase cerebral blood flow (49%), cerebral oxygen consumption (21%), and cerebral glucose uptake (76%), It appears probable that the cerebrovascular responses to norepinephrine are dependent on the integrity of the blood-brain barrier; It is likely that the increase in cerebral blood flow, associated with norepinephrine when it bypasses the barrier, is secondary to an increase in cerebral metabolism.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Cited by
313 articles.
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