methylatropine and phenyl-biguanide

methylatropine has been researched along with phenyl-biguanide* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for methylatropine and phenyl-biguanide

ArticleYear
Bezold-Jarisch reflex in sino-aortic denervated malnourished rats.
    Autonomic neuroscience : basic & clinical, 2011, Jul-05, Volume: 162, Issue:1-2

    In this study we assessed the role of Bezold-Jarisch reflex (BJR) in the regulation of blood pressure (BP) of malnourished (MN) and control rats (CN) with sino-aortic denervation (SAD). Fischer rats were fed diets containing either 6% (MN) or 15% (CN) protein for 35 days after weaning. These rats underwent sham or SAD and catheterization of femoral artery and vein for BP measurements and drug injection. Phenylbiguanide (PBG 5 μg/kg, i.v.) for activation BJR, produced bradycardia (-317±22 bpm for CN vs. -372±16 bpm for MN) and hypotension (-57±4 mm Hg for CN vs. -54±6 mm Hg for MN. After SAD, MN rats had reduced hypotensive (-37±7 mm Hg for MN vs. -82±6 mm Hg for CN) and bradycardic (-124±17 for MN vs. -414±20 bpm CN) responses to BJR activation. To evaluate the contribution of the parasympathetic component due to BJR for the fall in BP, methyl atropine bromide, was given between two injections of PBG (5 μg/kg) separated by 10 min each other. Both bradycardic (-216±21 bpm before and -4±3 bpm after for CN -226±43 bpm before and -9±20 bpm after for MN) and hypotensive (-42±4 mm Hg before and -6±1 mm Hg after for CN -33±9 mm Hg before and -5±2 mm Hg after for MN) responses were abolished in CN and MN groups. These data indicate that dietary protein malnutrition changes the relation between baroreflex and BJR required for maintenance of the BP during malnourishment.

    Topics: Animals; Atropine Derivatives; Biguanides; Blood Pressure; Body Weight; Denervation; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Heart Rate; Male; Malnutrition; Muscarinic Antagonists; Nitroprusside; Phenylephrine; Protein-Energy Malnutrition; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344; Reflex; Serotonin Receptor Agonists; Sinoatrial Node; Vasoconstrictor Agents; Vasodilator Agents

2011
Nonuniformity in the von Bezold-Jarisch reflex.
    American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology, 2007, Volume: 293, Issue:2

    The von Bezold-Jarisch reflex (BJR) is a vagally mediated chemoreflex from the heart and lungs, causing hypopnea, bradycardia, and inhibition of sympathetic vasomotor tone. However, cardiac sympathetic nerve activity (CSNA) has not been systematically compared with vasomotor activity during the BJR. In 11 urethane-anesthetized (1-1.5 g/kg iv), artificially ventilated rats, we measured CSNA simultaneously with lumbar sympathetic activity (LSNA) while the BJR was evoked by right atrial bolus injections of phenylbiguanide (0.5, 1.0, 1.5, and 2 microg). Nerve and heartbeat responses were analyzed by calculating normalized cumulative sums. LSNA and heartbeats were always reduced by the BJR. An excitatory "rebound" component often followed the inhibition of LSNA but never outweighed it. For CSNA, however, excitation usually (in 7 of 11 rats) outweighed any initial inhibition, such that the net response to phenylbiguanide was excitatory. The differences in net response between LSNA, CSNA, and heartbeats were all significant (P < 0.01). A second experimental series on seven rats showed that methyl atropine (1 mg/kg iv) abolished the bradycardia of the BJR, whereas subsequent bilateral vagotomy substantially reduced LSNA and CSNA responses, both excitatory and inhibitory. These findings show that, during the BJR, 1) CSNA is often excited, 2) there may be coactivation of sympathetic and parasympathetic drives to the heart, 3) divergent responses may be evoked simultaneously in cardiac vagal, cardiac sympathetic, and vasomotor nervous pathways, and 4) those divergent responses are mediated primarily by the vagi.

    Topics: Animals; Atropine Derivatives; Biguanides; Blood Pressure; Chemoreceptor Cells; Heart; Heart Rate; Lumbosacral Plexus; Male; Parasympatholytics; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Reflex; Serotonin Receptor Agonists; Sympathetic Nervous System; Vagotomy; Vagus Nerve; Vasodilation

2007