Abstract

Treatment with phenoxybenzamine and dichloroisoprenaline prevented the rise of blood pressure, contraction of the nictitating membrane and increase in cardiac contractile force produced by intravenous injections of bretylium and guanethidine in anaesthetized or spinal cats. Treatment with cocaine, imipramine or reserpine reduced the sensitivity to bretylium and guanethidine of the spinal cat. In the spinal cat treated with reserpine, sensitivity to the drugs could be restored by an infusion of noradrenaline. Chlorpromazine also blocked the pressor and nictitating membrane responses to bretylium and guanethidine. The drug effects were unaltered 1 hr after bilateral adrenalectomy. During the intravenous infusion of noradrenaline into spinal cats the pressor responses to bretylium and guanethidine were increased, whilst those to adrenaline and to noradrenaline were decreased. Guanethidine (3 to 5 mg/kg) injected intravenously into the cat caused a sudden relaxation of the rat isolated stomach-strip bathed in blood. In seven similar experiments bretylium (3 to 5 mg/kg) relaxed the strip only once; in the other six experiments there was either no effect (four experiments) or an increase in the tone of the strip (two experiments). It is concluded that the initial adrenergic effects of bretylium and guanethidine are mediated, at least in part, through a release of catechol amines from stores in the effector organ.

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