Abstract

Stimulation of the sympathetic nerves to the brain is known to make the resistance vessels able to withstand a higher blood pressure, i.e. to prevent blood-brain barrier (BBB) dysfunction and overperfusion in acute hypertension. When hypertension occurs concomitantly with a metabolic vasodilatation e.g. during epileptic seizures and after amphetamine-administration, protein leakage in the brain is more pronounced than in hypertension per se. Unilateral stimulation of the cervical sympathetic chain during the administration of amphetamine or bicuculline--the latter a GABA-receptor blocking substance that induces epileptic activity--attenuated the leakage of Evans blue-albumin and 125IHSA into the brain. Our results thus indicate a prophylactic effect of sympathetic stimulation also when hypertension is combined with a metabolically induced vasodilatation. The sympathetic nerves may constrict both extracerebral arteries and intracerebral resistance vessels. Unexpectedly the effect on the BBB of unilateral stimulation was to a great extent bilateral under the present experimental conditions.

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