Author:
Crawford Robert A.,Griffiths Ian R.,McCulloch James
Abstract
✓ The effect of intra-arterially administered norepinephrine (NE) upon spinal cord blood flow (SCBF), before and after disruption of the blood-cord barrier was studied in dogs. Barrier disruption was accomplished with an intra-arterial bolus injection of 2.5 M urea. Multiple ligations of branches of the posterior aorta and cannula placements ensured that the urea was directed to the lumbar and sacral segments of the cord. The SCBF was measured by the hydrogen clearance method. Intra-arterial urea by itself had no significant effect on SCBF.
The intra-arterial infusion of NE (12 µg/min and 30 µg/min) was without overall effect on SCBF. However, if the blood-cord barrier had been previously disrupted with hypertonic urea, both concentrations of NE resulted in large reductions in SCBF. No such reductions in SCBF were seen with blood-cord barrier disruption and NE if the animals had been pre-treated with the α-blocker, phenoxybenzamine (1.5 mg/kg). Some aspects of the possible involvement of NE in the pathophysiology of acute spinal injury are discussed.
Publisher
Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)
Cited by
22 articles.
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