• Title/Summary/Keyword: Pial artyeriole

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Role of Endothelium-derived Relaxing Factor in Cerebral Autoregulation in vivo (뇌혈류 자가조절에 대한 Endothelium-derived Relaxing Factor의 역할)

  • Hong Ki-Whan;Yu Sung-Suk;Rhim Byung-Yong
    • The Korean Journal of Pharmacology
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    • v.31 no.1 s.57
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    • pp.27-37
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    • 1995
  • In anesthetized rats, we examined the possibility that endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) or nitric oxide (NO) released in response to cholinergic mechanism may contribute to the reflex autoregulation of cerebral blood flow. Suffusion with mock cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), containing acetylcholine (ACh, $10^{-9}{\sim}10^{-6}M$) evoked concentration-dependent vasodilatation of the resting pial artery (mean, $19.3{\pm}1.7{\mu}m$, n=36), which was significantly inhibited not only by $N{\omega}$-nitro-L-arginine (L-NNA, $10^{-5}M$) but also by methylene blue ($10^{-6}M$) and oxyhemoglobin ($10^{-6}M$). The muscarinic receptors in the endothelium of pial artery implicated in the release of EDRF were considered to be $M_1\;and\;M_3$ subtypes. When suffused with mock CSF containing L-arginine it caused a transient vasodilatation, which was strongly inhibited by LY 83583 ($10^{-5}M$), but not by L-NNA ($10^{-5}M$). Additionally, both ACh- and L-arginine-induced vasodilation were significantly inhibited by glibenclamide, a specific ATP-sensitive $K^+$ channel blocker. On the other hand, changes in pial arterial diameter were plotted as a function of changes in systemic arterial blood pressure. The slopes of regression lines for vasodilation and vasoconstriction were not affected by pretreatment with $10^{-5}M$ L-NNA, but significantly reduced by $3{\times}10^{-6}M$ glibenclamide. Thus it is suggested that the reflex vasodilation of rat pial arteries in response to a transient hypotension is not mediated by EDRF (NO).

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