Abstract

The concentration-effect relationships of adrenergic agonists in inhibiting muscular tone, carbachol-induced contraction of circular muscle strips and nerve-mediated motor activity during the peristaltic reflex have been studied in intact and sympathetically denervated preparations of isolated guinea-pig colon. The order of potencies of adrenergic agonists was different for muscular and nerve-mediated effects, being clonidine greater than noradrenaline greater than methoxamine greater than isoprenaline for the inhibition of peristalsis and isoprenaline greater than noradrenaline greater than methoxamine greater than clonidine for the relaxation of circular muscle. Denervation supersensitivity was specific for the adrenergic agonists and developed both to the muscular and nerve-mediated effects, involving both alpha and beta receptors. The degree of potentiation was similar for noradrenaline and isoprenaline when measured for the muscular effects but was significantly higher for noradrenaline than for isoprenaline or methoxamine when measured for peristalsis inhibition. No potentiation could be observed for papaverine and for the muscular effects of methoxamine and phenylephrine. The increase in potency of noradrenaline ranged from a 26-fold increase for the inhibition of propulsion velocity to a 2.5-fold increase for the inhibition of carbachol-induced contraction. A much narrower range was observed for isoprenaline. Potentiation could also be observed for the inhibitory effect of noradrenaline on acetylcholine release. Clonidine was the most potent agonist against peristaltic reflex and the weakest agonist in relaxing circular muscle. Denervated preparations became subsensitive to the inhibitory effect of clonidine on peristaltic reflex. The potency of clonidine relative to noradrenaline was 488 in intact preparations and only 3.1 in denervated organs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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