Abstract

Ultrasonic flow probes were placed around the ascending aorta and each femoral artery of dogs to record cardiac index and femoral blood flow, respectively. Intravenous hexamethonium (n = 5) produced 30% decreases in systemic mean arterial pressure and in cardiac index, and a 14% increase in femoral blood flow, effects that waned over time, consistent with the half-life of the agent. Without hexamethonium, hind paw scalding with boiling water for 5 sec (n = 5) caused a marked increase in ipsilateral femoral artery blood flow (70.7 +/- 8.9 ml/min pre-burn vs 243.7 +/- 23.7 ml/min 5 min post-burn) that persisted for the 3 hr observation period. Contralateral femoral blood flow, systemic mean arterial pressure, and cardiac index were unchanged. Compared to burn only dogs, pre-burn treatment with hexamethonium (n = 6) blunted the femoral vasodilator response to burn (78.8 +/- 9.7 ml/min pre-burn vs 116.5 +/- 7.5 ml/min 5 min post-burn). These data suggest that postganglionic autonomic nerves are at least partially responsible for mediation of the regional vasodilator response to thermal injury.

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