In rabbits which were ventilated mechanically, with a background anaesthetic of pentobarbitone or after decerebration, ketamine depressed preganglionic sympathetic activity and arterial pressure. Conduction through central baroreceptor pathways, tested by depressor nerve stimulation, showed a selective inhibition of the heart rate response.
A quantitative in vitro study has been made of the actions of glyceryl trinitrate and sodium nitrite on vascular smooth muscle (dog femoral artery and saphenous vein; rat portal vein); these have been compared with the actions of papaverine, isoprenaline, salbutamol, pentaerythritol tetranitrate and trimetazidine.
Glyceryl trinitrate was more active on the saphenous vein than on the femoral artery in inhibiting noradrenaline and potassium‐induced tone.
Unlike glyceryl trinitrate, sodium nitrite and isoprenaline, papaverine and diazoxide inhibited noradrenaline‐induced contractions of venous and arterial smooth muscle to the same extent.
The selective dilator effects of glyceryl trinitrate on venous smooth muscle may explain its action in alleviating the pain of angina pectoris. It is suggested that the use of these three vascular smooth muscle preparations (arterial, and veins with and without spontaneous myogenic activity) is a useful initial screening procedure for prospective antianginal drugs acting by venodilatation.
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