phosphoramidon has been researched along with Paramyxoviridae-Infections* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for phosphoramidon and Paramyxoviridae-Infections
Article | Year |
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Viral infection potentiates the increase in airway blood flow produced by substance P.
We examined the effect of respiratory tract infection with Sendai virus on the responsiveness of airway blood flow to substance P (SP) in rats. Pathogen-free rats were inoculated with either Sendai virus suspension or sterile viral growth medium into each nostril. Five days later, we measured airway and esophageal blood flows before and immediately after injection of SP or histamine into the left ventricle of rats in both groups using a modification of the reference-sample microsphere technique. Viral infection potentiated the increase in airway blood flow evoked by SP but not by histamine. We also examined the effect of neutral endopeptidase (NEP) and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) on the SP-induced increase in airway blood flow. Both phosphoramidon (NEP inhibitor) and captopril (ACE inhibitor) potentiated the increase in airway blood flow produced by SP in pathogen-free rats. In the presence of both peptidase inhibitors, a submaximal dose of SP increased blood flow to a similar level in infected and pathogen-free rats. Thus decreased activity of both ACE and NEP may be involved in the exaggerated increase in airway blood flow evoked by SP in virus-infected rats. Topics: Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibitors; Animals; Captopril; Down-Regulation; Glycopeptides; Histamine; Male; Microspheres; Neprilysin; Parainfluenza Virus 1, Human; Paramyxoviridae Infections; Peptidyl-Dipeptidase A; Protease Inhibitors; Rats; Rats, Inbred F344; Regional Blood Flow; Respiratory System; Substance P | 1995 |
Virus induces airway hyperresponsiveness to tachykinins: role of neutral endopeptidase.
We examined the effects of viral respiratory infection by Sendai virus on airway responsiveness to tachykinins in guinea pigs. We measured the change in total pulmonary resistance induced by substance P or capsaicin in the presence or absence of the neutral endopeptidase inhibitor, phosphoramidon, in infected and in noninfected animals. In the absence of phosphoramidon, the bronchoconstrictor responses to substance P and to capsaicin were greater in infected than in noninfected animals. Phosphoramidon did not further potentiate the responses to substance P and to capsaicin in the infected animals, whereas it did so in noninfected animals. Studies performed in vitro showed that nonadrenergic noncholinergic bronchial smooth muscle responses to electrical field stimulation were also increased in tissues from infected animals and that phosphoramidon increased the response of tissues from noninfected animals greatly but increased the responses of tissues from infected animals only slightly. Responses to acetylcholine were unaffected by viral infection. Neutral endopeptidase activity was decreased by 40% in the tracheal epithelial layer of the infected animals. We suggest that respiratory infection by Sendai virus causes enhanced airway responsiveness to tachykinins by decreasing neutral endopeptidase-like activity in the airway epithelium. Topics: Animals; Bronchi; Capsaicin; Constriction, Pathologic; Electric Stimulation; Glycopeptides; Guinea Pigs; Male; Muscle, Smooth; Neprilysin; Parainfluenza Virus 1, Human; Paramyxoviridae Infections; Respiratory Tract Infections; Substance P; Tachykinins | 1989 |