Abstract

Electrical field stimulation (4 Hz, 0.2 ms, 70 V supramaximal voltage, 10 s duration) produced contraction of perfused rabbit central ear arteries, and this contraction was reduced by incubation with insulin (0.6–200 mU/ml). This inhibitory effect of insulin was not significantly modified by removing the endothelium, or by treatment with N W-nitro- l-arginine ( l-NA, 10 −4 M), meclofenamate (10 −5 M), ouabain (10 −6 M), or cocaine (10 −5 M). Insulin (200 mU/ml) did not modify the vascular contraction due to exogenous norepinephrine (10 −8–10 −4 M) nor the relaxation due to acetylcholine (10 −8–10 −4 M). This suggests that insulin may reduce vascular contraction by sympathetic stimulation, and this effect is not dependent on endothelial nitric oxide, prostanoids, or Na +–K + pump activation.

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