Abstract
The aim of this study was to find out whether, in humans, the increase in vagal tone accompanying cardiac beta-adrenoceptor (beta-AR) stimulation might be different dependent on beta1- or beta2-AR stimulation. For this purpose we studied, in six male healthy volunteers (aged 28+/-1 years), the effects of atropine infusion (0.15 microg/kg/min continuously) on increase in heart rate (HR) and contractility (determined as shortening of HR-corrected duration of electromechanical systole-QS2c) evoked by infusion of isoprenaline (3.5-35 ng/kg/min, increasing HR and QS2c via beta1-and beta2-AR), terbutaline (25-150 ng/kg/min, increasing HR and QS2c via beta2-AR), adrenaline (20-160 ng/kg/min, increasing HR via beta2-and QS2c via beta1-AR) and bicycle exercise in supine position (increasing HR and QS2c via beta1-AR). The three beta-AR agonists and exercise increased HR and shortened QS2c in a dose- or work-load-dependent manner, respectively. Atropine enhanced HR-increasing effects of all three beta-AR agonists and exercise; increases were larger for beta2-AR (terbutaline, adrenaline) mediated effects than for beta1-AR (exercise) mediated effects. Moreover, atropine enhanced beta-AR agonists-induced QS2c shortening; however, atropine effects on QS2c were markedly less pronounced than on HR. From the results we conclude that, in humans, beta1-and beta2-AR mediated stimulation evoked HR-increases are composed of two components: increases via direct beta-AR stimulation and simultaneously decreases via increase in vagal tone. In addition, beta-AR mediated increases in contractility are also dampened by simultaneous activation of vagal tone but to a lesser extent possibly because human ventricular myocardium is only sparsely parasympathetically innervated.
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