Abstract

Osmotic minipumps were used to infuse carbachol chloride (1.23 μg/hr), echothiophate iodide (0.5 μg/hr), histamine dihydrochloride (10 μg/hr), prostaglandin E 2 (1.0 μg/hr) and thyrotropin-releasing hormone (0.5 and 5.0 μg/hr) solutions into the cerebral ventricles of unanesthetized rats and blood pressure was measured by the tail-cuff method. Histamine dihydrochloride, prostaglandin E 2 and thyrotropin-releasing hormone produced an initial rise in blood pressure, but were not effective in producing sustained elevations in blood pressure. Carbachol infusions elevated blood pressure throughout the 7-day infusion period when results were compared to saline-infused animals. Infusions of echothiophate iodide, an anticholinesterase agent, produced an initial rise in blood pressure but these pressor effects were not sustained. In animals infused with echothiophate for 7 days, the pressor response to a challenge dose of echothiophate was diminished.

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