Author:
Shirai M.,Sada K.,Ninomiya I.
Abstract
In in vivo cat lung, using an X-ray TV system, we analyzed responses in internal diameter (ID), flow velocity, and volume flow of arteries and veins (100–500 microns ID) to histamine (8–15 micrograms/kg iv) under three conditions. With histamine alone, three types of ID response (constriction, dilatation, and no change) occurred in parallel-arranged arteries. Relative frequency and magnitude of constriction were maximum in arteries of 300–400 micron ID, whereas those of dilatation were maximum in arteries of 100–200 micron ID. In veins, relatively uniform constriction occurred. Under H2-blockade, histamine caused greater constriction than that with histamine alone in arteries and veins of 300–500 micron ID. Under beta-blockade, with histamine, ID of all vessels decreased significantly below the ID sizes under the above two conditions, and no dilatation occurred. In two parallel arteries that showed opposite ID changes to histamine, flow velocity increased, but volume flow decreased in a constricted artery while it increased in a dilated one. Those data indicated that, with histamine, qualitatively and quantitatively nonuniform ID response was induced in both parallel- and series-arranged small pulmonary arteries and, in turn, produced heterogeneous flow distribution. Factors to cause the nonuniformity may be partly explained by difference in density of H2- and beta-receptors in vascular walls.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
12 articles.
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