Possible role of an endogenous opioid in the antihypertensive action of propranolol in spontaneously hypertensive rats
- PMID: 6670566
Possible role of an endogenous opioid in the antihypertensive action of propranolol in spontaneously hypertensive rats
Abstract
The effect on systolic blood pressure and heart rate of the acute and chronic intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration of d- and dl-propranolol was investigated on unanesthetised spontaneously hypertensive rats. The effect of naloxone on the propranolol induced hypotension was also studied to test the hypothesis that the antihypertensive effect of propranolol involves the release of an endogenous opiate. On i.p. administration, 3 mg/kg d-propranolol was inactive; 3 and 30 mg/kg dl-propranolol decreased blood pressure and heart rate in a dose-dependent manner. When the rats were pretreated with 2 mg/kg naloxone i.p., the effect of propranolol on the blood pressure was nearly completely abolished, while that on the heart rate was only partially blocked. Chronic administration of dl-propranolol (30 mg/kg b.i.d.) to spontaneously hypertensive rats from the age of 6 weeks (prehypertensive phase) for 29 days prevented the development of hypertension while the rats treated with physiological saline for 29 days (control group) developed hypertension. Naloxone (2 mg/kg i.p.) administered on the 29th day to chronically treated rats induced a reversal of the propranolol action on systolic blood pressure and heart rate, i.e., blood pressure and heart rate increased. Naloxone had no such effect in the control group. We suggest that the release of an endogenous opioid contributes to the acute and chronic antihypertensive action of i.p. propranolol in spontaneously hypertensive rats and that the secretion of endogenous opioids participating in the control of cardiovascular functions is influenced by adrenergic mechanisms.
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