Abstract

1 The effects of stress in rats were evaluated by measuring changes in body weight and in responsiveness to noradrenaline (NA) in the isolated vas deferens and atria after the animals had been exposed to restraint or restraint and isolation. 2 Animals which were subjected to restraint alone (1 h day-1 for 3, 7 or 28 days) had a significantly reduced rate of body weight gain. This effect was not potentiated by the additional stress of isolation. 3 Restraint alone did not produce significant changes in the responsiveness of the vas deferens to NA. However, adding isolation to restraint, as an additional stress, produced a further leftward shift of the NA dose-response curve for the vas deferens, so that there was a significant increase in sensitivity compared with control. 4 There was a significant rightward shift in the NA dose-response curves or reduction in sensitivity in the atria from animals which had been restrained for 7 or 28 days. Isolation did not produce a further rightward shift in the NA dose-response curve. 5 The results from this study indicate that the stress associated with repeated restraint reduces the rate of weight gain and reduces the responsiveness of the atria to NA. The responsiveness of the vas deferens to NA was increased by stress, but the combined effect of isolation and restraint was required to produce a significant effect. The differences in the effects of stress on these tissues could be associated with differences in presynaptic receptor populations.

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