Abstract

The distribution of the sympathetic innervation to the internal anal sphincter (IAS) and rectum and the occurrence of different types of adrenergic receptors in the two organs were investigated in anaesthetized cats. Anal pressure and rectal motility were recorded by a manometric and a volumetric method respectively. Division of both the hypogastric nerves (HGN) and the lumbar colonic nerves (LCN) reduced the anal pressure by 46 +/- 6% of the resting pressure (40.9 +/- 6.4 mmHg) and consistently increased rectal motility. Efferent electrical stimulation of the HGN as well as the LCN elicited a contraction in the anus and the rectum, which, at maximal stimulation, caused the anal pressure to reach a similar level to that recorded before division of these nerves. After injection of phentolamine the anal contraction was abolished, whereas the rectal contraction was either abolished or converted to a beta-adrenergic relaxation. Propranolol caused increased rectal contraction in response to stimulation of the HGN and the LCN, whereas the anal contraction was unaffected. The results imply that the sympathetic nerves exert a tonic excitatory effect on the IAS and a dual effect on the rectum in the cat. The results also indicate that sympathetic fibres to the IAS are conveyed in both the HGN and the LCN. Inhibitory beta-adrenergic receptors seem to be of minor importance in regulating anal pressure.

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