Abstract

Normal vascular tonus and permeability of the microcirculatory network is mediated by catecholamines, histamine and serotonin. Following electroconvulsive treatment (ECT), histamine did not provoke local vasodilatation. The inhibition was further potentiated by drugs which prevent the enzymatic or physical inactivarion of free catecholamines and by locally administered norepinephrine. This system became conditioned to a visual stimulus when rats were presented in six consecutive occasions with the visual stimulus preceedingly coincided with the administration of ECT. In the conditioned rats, light alone inhibited the histamine-induced vasodilatation, and this inhibition was potentiated by sub-effective doses of injected norepinephrine and by drugs which prevent the enzymatic or physical inactivation of catecholamines. Sedatives, antidepressants, MAO inhibitors and the chlorpromazine-type agents as well as the psychotomimetic drugs characteristically influence either the acquisition or the extinction of the conditioned reflex. Results suggest that the obtained conditioning of the microcirculatory functions are mediated by tie centrally released catecholamines.

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