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. 1984 Jun;326(2):148-54.
doi: 10.1007/BF00517312.

Dopamine in the conscious dog with chronic heart-block. Mechanisms of chronotropic cardiac effects

Dopamine in the conscious dog with chronic heart-block. Mechanisms of chronotropic cardiac effects

M Boucher et al. Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch Pharmacol. 1984 Jun.

Abstract

The chronotropic effects of dopamine were studied in the conscious dog with chronic A-V block. Dopamine at 12.5-200 micrograms/kg and 12.5-50 micrograms/kg/min lowered atrial rate independently of dose. After blockade of muscarine receptors or alpha-adrenoceptors, it raised atrial rate. After blockade of dopamine receptors, dopamine still lowered atrial rate, and did so dose-relatedly after blockade of beta-adrenoceptors. It raised ventricular rate, and at high doses also induced ventricular rhythm disorders. Blockade of muscarine receptors enhanced the ventricular cardioaccelerator effect of dopamine (P less than 0.025) at 100 micrograms/kg, while blockade of alpha-adrenoceptors reduced it (P less than 0.05). Blockade of dopamine receptors did not modify this effect, but blockade of beta-adrenoceptors reversed it. Dopamine at 25-200 micrograms/kg raised mean blood pressure. This effect was enhanced by blockade of muscarine receptors, reversed by blockade of alpha-adrenoceptors, and was unaffected by blockade of beta-adrenoceptors or dopamine receptors. These results show that the atrial cardiomoderator effect of dopamine is a vagal reflex response to its hypertensive action, and that it is limited by its direct beta-adrenergic stimulating action. They also show that the ventricular cardioaccelerator effect of dopamine is attenuated by a reflex vagal depressor effect consequent to the induced hypertension. No evidence was found for the existence of positive chronotropic dopamine receptors in either atria or ventricles.

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