Publication | Closed Access
Effect of removal of the endothelium on vasocontraction in canine and rabbit basilar arteries
52
Citations
36
References
1988
Year
The effect of endothelium removal on the contractile responses to KCl, hemoglobin, serotonin (5-HT), norepinephrine (NE), prostaglandin (PG)F2 alpha, PGD2, and PGE2 was investigated in canine and rabbit basilar arteries by an isometric tension-recording method. In canine basilar arteries, endothelium removal elevated the dose-response curves to 5-HT, PGF2 alpha, and PGD2, and PGE2, but not to KCl, hemoglobin, or NE. In rabbit basilar arteries, on the other hand, removal of the endothelium elevated the dose-response curves to 5-HT, NE, PGF2 alpha, and PGD2, but not to KCl or hemoglobin. Neither contractile nor inhibitory response was elicited by PGE2 in rabbit basilar arteries. Contraction induced by 5-HT and NE following endothelium removal had a much more pronounced effect in rabbit basilar arteries than in canine basilar arteries. These results suggest that, following endothelium removal, abolition of the spontaneous release of endothelium-derived relaxing factor is the most probable mechanism of the enhanced vasocontraction. Since endothelial damage results from subarachnoid hemorrhage, the aforementioned mechanism of vasocontraction enhancement may play a role in the pathogenesis of cerebral vasospasm.
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