Abstract

There is evidence that nitric oxide (NO) is involved in the chronotropic, the inotropic, and the vasodilator response to β-adrenoceptor agonists. In the present study we hypothesized that inhibition of NO synthase may modulate the systemic vascular and cardiac effects of isoprenaline, a β-adrenoceptor agonist, in healthy subjects. Subjects received stepwise increasing doses of isoprenaline (0.1–0.8 μg/min) in the absence or presence of systemic NO-synthase inhibition using two intravenous doses of N-monomethyl-l-arginine (L-NMMA; dosage 1, 3.0 mg/kg over 5 min, followed by 30 μg/kg/min over 75 min; dosage 2, 6.0 mg/kg over 5 min, followed by 60 μg/kg/min over 75 min) or peripheral vasoconstriction using exogenous endothelin-1 (ET-1; 5.0 ng/kg/min for 80 min). The chronotropic (RR interval) and the inotropic (QS2c) responses were assessed by noninvasive measurement of systolic time intervals. L-NMMA alone did not influence QS2c, but did increase the RR interval (P < 0.001) and the mean arterial blood pressure (P = 0.003). L-NMMA did not attenuate the blood pressure and the QS2c responses to isoprenaline, but significantly and dose-dependently blunted the heart rate response to β-adrenoceptor stimulation (P = 0.029). ET-1 decreased the RR interval (P < 0.001) and increased the mean arterial blood pressure (P = 0.028). Our results indicate that β-adrenoceptor mediated effects on the heart rate are much more susceptible to NOS inhibition than inotropic responses. This indicates that NO has an important role in heart rate control during β-adrenoceptor stimulation.

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