Abstract
From the trachea, main bronchi and hilus bronchi of guinea pigs, preparations were isolated for registration of mechanical tension on electrical field stimulation and drugs. The trachea contracted on short trains of electrical stimulation. Usually these contractions were followed by a relaxant response. The contractions were abolished while the relaxations were potentiated by atropine. In the main bronchi field stimulation induced a contractile response which was abolished by atropine. In the latter preparation relaxant responses were never observed, even not after atropine. In the trachea and main bronchi neither the alpha 1 blocker prazosin nor the alpha2 blocker yohimbine affected the contractile or relaxant responses when used in alpha-blocking concentrations. The relaxant response in trachea was neither affected by the "P1 blocker" theophylline nor by the "P2 blocker" quinidine but it was partially inhibited by guanethidine or beta-blocking agents. The hilus bronchi contracted on field stimulation as well as histamine. The contractile response on electrical stimulation was only slightly inhibited by atropine or guanethidine. In all three preparations responses on field stimulation were abolished by tetrodotoxin. It is suggested that in both trachea and main bronchi excitatory cholinergic innervation is present. Further, the trachea but not the main bronchi is innervated by both adrenergic and nonadrenergic inhibitory nerves. The hilus bronchi contains a non-adrenergic non-cholinergic excitatory nervous system.
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