Publication | Closed Access
Failure of Beta-Adrenergic Receptor Blockade to Prevent Arrhythmias Induced by Sympathetic Nerve Stimulation
23
Citations
13
References
1974
Year
Heart FailureCardiac AnaesthesiaCardiovascular PharmacologyCardiac Cholinergic ReceptorsSocial SciencesNeuromuscular BlockadeAdrenal GlandSympathetic Nervous SystemCardiologyEndocrine HypertensionElectrical StimulationArrhythmias InducedBeta-adrenergic PharmacologyBeta-adrenergic Receptor BlockadeNervous SystemPharmacologySympathetic Nerve StimulationNeurophysiologyCombined AdministrationPhysiologyElectrophysiologyAnesthesiaMedicineAnesthesiologyArrhythmia
Cardiac arrhythmias produced by electrical stimulation of the ventrolateral cardiac sympathetic nerve in dogs were not blocked by the combined administration of propranolol and practolol in amounts that completely blocked cardiac beta-adrenergic receptors. Blockade of cardiac alpha-adrenergic receptors, as well as cardiac cholinergic receptors, also had no influence on the arrhythmias. These results suggest that the adrenergic neuroeffector junction is fundamentally different from any hitherto described, differing perhaps in the neurotransmitter involved or in the nature of the receptor.
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