Abstract

The effects of phenylephrine, isoprenaline and adenosine, (-)-N6-phenylisopropyladenosine (PIA) or carbachol alone and in the presence of isoprenaline on force of contraction were studied in isolated electrically driven papillary muscles of spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and age-matched Wistar control rats. In SHR an increased heart to body weight ratio was observed when blood pressure was not yet elevated. During this stage of the syndrome (i.e. between the 27th and 35th day of life) phenylephrine was about 3.4 times more potent to increase force of contraction in SHR (mean EC50: 2.8 mumol l-1) than in control rats (mean EC50: 9.4 mumol l-1). The positive inotropic effect of isoprenaline was similar in SHR and control rats. Also no difference could be detected in the isoprenaline-antagonistic effect of adenosine, the adenosine receptor agonist PIA or carbachol. We conclude that an increased sensitivity to cardiac alpha-adrenoceptor stimulation might be related to prehypertensive cardiac hypertrophy in SHR.

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