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. 1980 Aug;66(2):306-13.
doi: 10.1172/JCI109858.

Supersensitivity of atherosclerotic rabbit aorta to ergonovine. Mediation by a serotonergic mechanism

Supersensitivity of atherosclerotic rabbit aorta to ergonovine. Mediation by a serotonergic mechanism

P D Henry et al. J Clin Invest. 1980 Aug.

Abstract

Patients with coronary vasospasm appear to be supersensitive to the coronary constrictor effects of ergonovine. To determine whether atherosclerosis alters arterial reactivity and sensitizes arteries to ergonovine, contractile responses of isolated aortae from control rabbits and from rabbits fed a high-cholesterol diet were compared. Aortic strips were mounted in a myograph for the monitoring of isometric tension, equilibrated in oxygenated Krebs buffer, and exposed to graded concentrations of agonists and antagonists. The concentration-response relation for ergonovine in atherosclerotic arteries exhibited a markedly depressed constrictor threshold concentration (0.5 pM vs. 0.23 muM in controls), a significantly lowered one-half effective dose (ED(50)) value, and an augmented maximal response. Furthermore, atherosclerotic arteries showed similar, although less pronounced changes in the concentration-response relation for serotonin. In contrast, responses to 34 mM KCl were virtually identical, and the concentration-response relation for phenylephrine were similar in the two groups. In control arteries, 0.1 muM phentolamine and 0.1 muM prazosin suppressed responses to 1 muM ergonovine by 71 and 90%, respectively. However, in atherosclerotic arteries alpha-blockers in the same concentration inhibited responses to 0.01 muM ergonovine by less than 10%. On the other hand, 0.1 muM cyproheptadine, a serotonergic antagonist, suppressed these responses by 82%. Thus, the supersensitivity to ergonovine appeared to be mediated predominantly by a serotonergic mechanism. These results indicate that smooth muscle in atherosclerotic arteries may be supersensitive to specific vasoconstricting stimuli, a change that might contribute to arterial dysfunction in vivo.

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