Abstract

A chick isolated rectum pretreated with atropine and indomethacin and superfused with the oxygenated mixed venous blood of anaesthetized cats, was selectively contracted by PGE 1 and PGE 2 at concentrations of <1 ng/ml. Intravenous infusion of norepinephrine (0.2 – 8.0 μg/kg/min) into the cats resulted in a contraction of the blood-bathed chick rectum. This was matched by contractions produced by PGE 2 (0.4 – 7 ng/ml) infused directly over the assay organ. The appearance of a chick rectum contracting substance in the venous blood was paralleled by a decline in the pressor response to norepinephrine. A single injection of indomethacin (3 – 10 mg/kg) prevented both the formation of the prostaglandin-like material and the acute tolerance to the pressor response to norepinephrine. Both effects could then be reproduced by an intra-arterial infusion of PGE 2 at a rate 0.125 – 0.5 μg/kg/min. β-Adrenoceptor blockade had no influence on the response of chick rectum and arterial blood pressure to an infusion of norepine phrine, but α-adrenoceptor blockade abolished both responses. It is postulated that the acute tolerance to norepinephrine infusions is the result of a release of PGE-like material from the contracting vascular bed.

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