PMID: 9435595Jan 22, 1998Paper

Separation of peripheral and central cardiovascular actions of angiotensin II

The American Journal of Physiology
J S KoonerC J Mathias

Abstract

The pressor and vasoconstrictor action of angiotensin II (ANG II) is considered to be caused by a combination of its direct and indirect vascular effects, the latter mediated by the sympathetic nervous system. The purpose of this study was to determine the extent to which the direct and indirect actions of ANG II contribute to its pressor and vascular effects. Blood pressure, cutaneous vascular, and plasma norepinephrine responses to intravenous ANG II were measured in conscious rabbits before and after inhibition of central sympathetic outflow with intravenous and intracisternal clonidine and after ganglionic blockade with intravenous pentolinium. Intravenous ANG II caused a similar dose-related rise in blood pressure before and after sympathetic blockade with intravenous clonidine, intracisternal clonidine, and intravenous pentolinium. In contrast, the dose-related fall in cutaneous ear blood flow and cutaneous ear temperature and rise in cutaneous ear vascular resistance induced by intravenous ANG II were abolished after intravenous clonidine, intracisternal clonidine, and intravenous pentolinium. Heart rate was unchanged after ANG II. There were no changes in back skin or rectal temperature. There was a nonsignificant fall ...Continue Reading

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Citations

Jul 18, 2002·American Journal of Physiology. Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology·Ling Xu, Alan F Sved
Sep 13, 2018·Bioscience Reports·Christopher J CharlesA Mark Richards

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