Changes in sensitivity to histamine of guinea pig cardiac muscles during postnatal development

Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology
K ShigenobuY Kasuya

Abstract

Histamine stimulates the heart by interacting with cardiac histamine receptors. We investigated the postnatal changes in histamine sensitivity with spontaneously beating right atria and electrically driven left atria and right ventricular papillary muscles from 0-, 5-, and 10-day-old and adult guinea pigs. The positive chronotropic response to histamine in right atria was antagonized by cimetidine but not by chlorpheniramine at any age. Chlorpheniramine did not antagonize the positive inotropic effect of histamine and 2-(2-pyridyl)ethylamine in the immature left atria but it blocked the positive inotropic effect in the adult; cimetidine had no effect. The positive inotropic effect of histamine in right ventricular muscles was not affected by chlorpheniramine in immature right ventricular muscles but was antagonized in the adult. These results suggest that, in immature left atria and right ventricular muscles, there is no H1-receptor system mediating the positive inotropic effect of histamine and that, as age advances, this system begins to mediate the positive inotropic effect. In immature left atria, non-H1 and non-H2 receptors exist and mediate the positive inotropic effect of histamine.

Citations

Aug 1, 1987·Naunyn-Schmiedeberg's Archives of Pharmacology·J Sanchez-Chapula, A Elizalde
May 27, 1986·European Journal of Pharmacology·K M MacLeodJ H McNeill
Dec 9, 2010·Biological & Pharmaceutical Bulletin·Naoki AgataYoshio Tanaka

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