Sympathectomy and beta-adrenergic blockade during lung maturation stimulated by TRH and cortisol in fetal sheep

1993 ◽  
Vol 75 (1) ◽  
pp. 141-147 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. C. Schellenberg ◽  
G. C. Liggins ◽  
J. A. Kitterman ◽  
C. C. Lee

To test whether beta-adrenergic mechanisms and the sympathetic nervous system are involved in the synergistic action of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and cortisol on lung maturation, fetal sheep (n = 32) were infused from 121 to 128 days of gestation with saline, TRH + cortisol, TRH + cortisol + beta-adrenergic blocker, or TRH + cortisol after chemical sympathectomy with 6-hydroxydopamine. TRH + cortisol increased lung distensibility and stability and alveolar concentrations of saturated phosphatidylcholine two- to threefold over control fetuses. beta-Adrenergic blockade prevented the increase in distensibility in response to TRH + cortisol. Sympathectomy did not impair the increase in distensibility and stability in response to TRH + cortisol but inhibited the increase in alveolar total phospholipids. Tissue concentrations of saturated phosphatidylcholine increased in TRH + cortisol-treated fetuses after either sympathectomy or beta-adrenergic blockade. We concluded that during lung maturation by TRH + cortisol 1) sympathetic mechanisms are requisite for surfactant release, 2) nonneurogenic beta-adrenergic mechanisms are requisite for the maturation of the mechanical properties of the lung and 3) stimulation of surfactant synthesis is independent of beta-adrenergic action and the sympathetic nervous system.

2021 ◽  
pp. 117-118
Author(s):  
Josef Zicha

The important participation of sympathetic nervous system in various forms of experimental hypertension is well known. This is also true for salt hypertension elicited by excess salt intake in Dahl salt-sensitive rats (for review see Zicha et al. 2012). Two recent studies in Dahl rats (Zicha et al. 2019, Puleo et al. 2020) evaluated the hypothesis on the role of β-adrenergic WNK4-NCC pathway in salt-sensitive hypertension which has been proposed by Mu et al. (2011). Although these studies differed in many experimental details, both of them demonstrated a major importance of α1- rather than β adrenergic mechanisms for the development of salt hypertension in this rat strain. Zicha et al. (2019) demonstrated that chronic β adrenergic blockade by propranolol did not lower blood pressure (BP) in Dahl salt-sensitive rats developing salt hypertension. It also did not modify their sympathetic component or natriuretic response to acute hydrochlorothiazide administration which inhibited the activity of sodium-chloride cotransporter (NCC). Puleo et al. (2020) reported that chronic β-adrenergic blockade failed to affect salt hypertension development or to reduce renal WNK4-NCC pathway. On the other hand, their study demonstrated the important influence of α1 adrenergic pathway on the activity, expression and phosphorylation of NCC. Chronic α1-adrenergic antagonism by terazosin treatment in Dahl salt-sensitive rats, which started before the onset of high salt intake, considerably attenuated the development of salt hypertension. This treatment diminished BP difference between the salt-loaded Dahl salt-sensitive rats and their control groups by 70-75 %. However, terazosin-treated Dahl salt-sensitive animals fed a high-salt diet had not only suppressed renal NCC activity but they also did not respond to acute phenylephrine administration. This suggests that chronic α1-adrenergic blockade affected both renal sodium retention mechanisms and α1-adrenergic vasoconstriction (Puleo et al. 2020). It remains to determine how these two mechanisms contribute to salt hypertension in Dahl rats. We found that the acute ganglionic blockade lowered substantially BP of salt hypertensive Dahl rats, abolishing 45-55 % of the BP difference between salt-loaded Dahl salt-sensitive rats and their control groups (Zicha et al. 2019). If we consider the results of both above studies, it seems that the renal contribution might be responsible for about 25 % of BP elevation seen in Dahl salt-sensitive rats developing salt hypertension, whereas α1-adrenergic vasoconstriction contributes to this BP change by about 50 %. Of course, this consideration is highly speculative. Nevertheless, it might stimulate further effort to distinguish the role of kidney and brain in the pathogenesis of salt hypertension. Perhaps even more promising could be the estimation of renal and extrarenal effects of central sympathoexcitation in Dahl rats (Mark 1991, Gabor and Leenen 2012, Fujita et al. 2009) which is related to central α2-adrenergic mechanisms (Wainford et al. 2015). As far as the role of kidney in the pathogenesis of salt hypertension is concerned (Frame et al. 2019), some attention should also be paid to participation of renal vascular and tubular effects of increased sympathetic tone in these salt hypertensive animals.


1983 ◽  
Vol 245 (5) ◽  
pp. H767-H772 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. S. Iwamoto ◽  
A. M. Rudolph ◽  
B. L. Mirkin ◽  
L. C. Keil

In fetal sheep, hypoxemia causes arterial hypertension, bradycardia, a redistribution of blood flow, and an increase in plasma vasopressin and catecholamine concentrations. To assess the role of the sympathetic nervous system in mediating these responses, we administered 6-hydroxydopamine to 11 chronically catheterized fetal sheep. Some of the responses to acute hypoxemia, achieved by administration of a low-O2 gas mixture to the ewe, were similar to those in intact fetal sheep. Fetal arterial O2 tension decreased from 22 +/- 3 to 12 +/- 3 (SD) Torr; fetal heart rate decreased transiently; combined ventricular output and umbilical-placental blood flow, as measured by the radionuclide-labeled microsphere technique, were maintained; cerebral, myocardial, and adrenal blood flow increased, and pulmonary blood flow decreased. However, there was no significant change in arterial pressure or blood flow to the peripheral, renal, and splanchnic circulations in the chemically sympathectomized fetuses in response to hypoxemia. The sympathetic nervous system is important in certain fetal vascular responses to hypoxemia but is not necessary for vascular responses in certain critical organs and thus is not crucial for fetal survival during hypoxia.


1975 ◽  
Vol 229 (2) ◽  
pp. 350-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
DJ Koerker ◽  
CJ Goodner ◽  
EW Chideckel ◽  
JW Ensinck

Regulation of lipolysis by the sympathetic nervous system, basal insulin, and glucagon was studied in fasted baboons. Beta-Adrenergic mechanisms were evaluated by blockade with propranolol after 24, 40, and 65 h of fasting. Inhibition of lipolysis decreased with increasing duration of fasting. Insulin concentrations were markedly reduced by propranolol at all stages of fasting, whereas glucose and glucagon concentrations were unchanged. The roles of insulin and glucagon were evaluated by a 2-h infusion of somatostatin after 18 and 65 h of fasting. At both times, insulin and glucagon concentrations were markedly reduced. At 18 h of fasting but not at 65 h, lipolysis doubled. At both times the plasma glucose concentration fell 15-30%. At 18 h, preventing the decrease in glucose with glucose infusion prevented the increase in lipolysis. These data suggest that a beta-adrenergic mechanism is largely responsible for regulation of lipolysis early in fasting and that insulin, glucagon, and beta-adrenergic mechanisms play no major part in the maintenance of the accelerated lipolysis later in fasting.


1987 ◽  
Vol 65 (8) ◽  
pp. 1615-1618 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. H. Alper ◽  
H. J. Jacob ◽  
M. J. Brody

Deafferentation of sinoaortic baroreceptors produces a marked increase in the lability of arterial pressure that is sustained chronically. Studies reviewed in this paper were designed to determine the mechanisms responsible for generating arterial pressure lability. Pharmacological interruption of the humoral vasopressin and angiotensin systems failed to alter arterial pressure lability. In contrast, blockade of sympathetic nervous system transmission at both ganglionic and alpha-adrenergic receptor levels significantly attenuated lability. A similar effect was observed with the peripheral neurotoxin, 6-hydroxydopamine. After blockade of sympathetic transmission, a further reduction in lability was produced by blocking the renin–angiotensin or vasopressin systems. The dissociation of the level of arterial pressure from lability was achieved with parachloroamphetamine which raised arterial pressure but reduced lability. A substantial peripheral contribution to lability was obtained in experiments in which the alpha-adrenergic agonist, phenylephrine, produced a marked increase in lability in both normal and baroreceptor-denervated animals in which humoral and neural transmission were blocked. These data demonstrate that following baroreceptor deafferentation, arterial pressure lability is produced primarily by the sympathetic nervous system and secondarily by circulating humoral factors that appear to act on vascular smooth muscle to induce fluctuations in the level of arterial pressure.


1991 ◽  
Vol 261 (4) ◽  
pp. R920-R927 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Haddad ◽  
J. A. Armour

The functional cardiac innervation of 61 puppies from nine different litters (2-8 littermates), ranging in age from 1 day to 7 wk, was investigated. The efferent sympathetic nervous system exerted minimal effects on the heart of 1-day-old puppies, gradually influencing the heart more thereafter such that by 7 wk of life it was functionally mature. In contrast, efferent parasympathetic cardiac innervation was well developed at birth, maturing thereafter such that by 4-7 wk of age its capacity to modulate the heart was similar to that found in adults. The right- and left-sided efferent sympathetic and parasympathetic intrathoracic nervous systems induced similar cardiac modulation throughout this period of development. Cardiac myocyte beta-adrenergic receptors were partially functional at birth, as determined by responses elicited by supramaximal doses of the beta-agonist isoproterenol. Responses elicited by isoproterenol became greater over the following 7 wk of life, when they were found to be similar to those elicited in adults. By 1 wk of age, synaptic mechanisms in intrathoracic sympathetic ganglia involved in cardiac regulation were relatively well developed, with cardiopulmonary-cardiac reflexes present but not functionally mature at that age. It is concluded that maturation of the efferent sympathetic nervous system modulating the canine heart depends to a large extent on the ontogeny of cardiac beta-adrenergic receptors rather than the ontogeny of synapses in intrathoracic ganglia. Furthermore, even though functional cardiac efferent parasympathetic innervation is present before efferent sympathetic innervation, both reach maturity at about the same age.


1986 ◽  
Vol 70 (S14) ◽  
pp. 69s-76s ◽  
Author(s):  
N. J. R. George ◽  
C. Reading

Careful clinical and investigative protocols allow the identification of a homogeneous group of patients with prostatodynia or ‘anxious bladder syndrome’ (underactive detrusor function). Psychophysiological studies and urodynamic measurements in such patients demonstrate remarkably consistent results, which, whilst lending support to the hypothesis that the sympathetic nervous system may affect bladder and urethral function, do not offer objective proof that adrenergic mechanisms are directly responsible for the observed dysfunctional state.


1982 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 221
Author(s):  
Bart Chernow ◽  
Michael Ziegler ◽  
Joseph Coyle ◽  
David Cruess ◽  
Pat Hughes ◽  
...  

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