Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R3E 0W3
Abstract
The involvement of nitric oxide (NO) in the vascular escape from norepinephrine (NE)-induced vasoconstriction was investigated in the hepatic arterial vasculature of anesthetized cats. The hepatic artery was perfused by free blood flow or pump-controlled constant-flow, and NE (0.15 and 0.3 μg ⋅ kg−1 ⋅ min−1, respectively) was infused through the portal vein. In the free-flow perfusion model, the NE-induced hepatic vasoconstriction recovered from the maximum point of the constriction, resulting in 36.6 ± 5.9% vascular escape. Blockade of NO formation with N ω-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-NAME, 2.5 mg/kg ipv) potentiated NE-induced maximum vasoconstriction, and the potentiation was reversed byl-arginine (75 mg/kg ipv). Furthermore, NE-induced vasoconstriction became more stable after l-NAME, resulting in an inhibition of vascular escape (7.5 ± 3.3%), and the inhibition was reversed by l-arginine (23.0 ± 6.4%). Similar potentiation of NE-induced vasoconstriction and inhibition of hepatic vascular escape by l-NAME (40.4 ± 4.3% control vs. 10.2 ± 3.7% post-l-NAME escape) and the reversal byl-arginine were also observed in the constant-flow perfusion model. The data suggest that NO is the major endogenous mediator involved in the hepatic vascular escape from NE-induced vasoconstriction.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Gastroenterology,Hepatology,Physiology
Cited by
16 articles.
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