Abstract

The purpose of the present work was to verify the effect of pyridostigmine bromide, a reversible cholinesterase inhibitor, on the increases in cardiac work and myocardial oxygen demand produced by central sympathetic stimulation in pentobarbital-anesthetized Wistar rats. The pharmacological stimulation of the central nervous system with L-glutamate (1 mg/kg, intracerebroventricular) elicited marked increases in arterial pressure, dP/dt(max), rate-pressure product, and triple product, reproducing the cardiovascular alterations observed during physical effort and stressful situations. The oral administration of pyridostigmine bromide (5, 10 and 20 mg/kg) 2 hours before central stimulation blunted the increases in mean arterial pressure, dP/dt(max), and triple product elicited by glutamate (29, 28 and 57% for 5 mg/kg; 26, 23 and 46% for 10 mg/kg and 19, 17 and 37% for 20 mg/kg, respectively) when compared to the control group (41, 49 and 106%, respectively; p < 0.05). Our results also showed that the activity of plasmatic cholinesterase was effectively inhibited by pyridostigmine bromide. In conclusion, the increases in endogenous acetylcholine induced by cholinesterase inhibition blunted the centrally-evoked increases in myocardial oxygen demand in anesthetized rats. This effect could represent a cardioprotective action in a situation of ischemic heart disease.

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