Abstract

Chloride (Cl) of saliva evoked by electrical stimulation of the parasympathetic nerve to parotid gland was from two to seven times higher than that elicited with sympathetic nerve stimulation; [Cl] remained elevated (125-135 mEq/liter) for 60 min of parasympathetic nerve stimulation, whereas Cl of sympathetically evoked saliva decreased from high levels of 58 to 15 to 20 mEq/liter. The administration of propranolol, the beta-adrenergic antagonist, 20 min prior to initiation of sympathetic nerve stimulation resulted in saliva with Cl of 100 mEq/liter; when phentolamine, the alpha-adrenergic antagonist was administered prior to sympathetic nerve stimulation, [Cl] was 48-35 mEq/liter. Values with the beta-agonist, isoproterenol, were about 35 mEq/liter, whereas phenylephrine, an alpha-adrenergic agonist, evoked saliva with Cl ranging from 113 to 85 mEq/liter. Flow rate was very high with parasympathetic nerve stimulation and low with sympathetic nerve stimulation, but [Cl] with beta-blockade was not flow dependent: flow was very low but Cl high. Cl secretion is principally regulated by activation of cholinergic and alpha-adrenergic receptors.

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