Abstract

We examined the importance of timing with endorphin involvement in shock by giving the opiate receptor antagonist naloxone as a pretreatment in canine endotoxic shock. Dogs anesthetized with pentobarbital (30 mg/kg iv) were given Escherichia coli endotoxin at LD80 doses iv. Naloxone (2 mg/kg plus 2 mg/kg/hr iv, N = 10) started 15 min before endotoxin attenuated the fall in mean arterial pressure, cardiac index, and the first derivative of left ventricular pressure due to endotoxin in comparison with control animals given 0.9% NaCl (N = 10). Naloxone attenuated the endotoxin-induced decrease in superior mesenteric arterial blood flow and the increases in portal venous pressure and pulmonary arterial pressures. Moreover, naloxone pretreatment prevented the characteristic bloody diarrhea and reduced mortality. Our findings implicate endorphins acting on opiate receptors as important mediators of endotoxin-induced cardiovascular failure and bloody diarrhea in canine endotoxemia. These are early manifestations and dictate expeditious use of naloxone in endotoxic shock.

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