Imai Y, Kim C Y, Hashimoto J, Minami N, Munakata M, Abe K
Second Department of Medicine, Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan.
Hypertension. 1996 Jan;27(1):136-43. doi: 10.1161/01.hyp.27.1.136.
Vasovagal reflexes, such as hypotension and bradycardia, are induced by rapid hemorrhage and mimic neurocardiogenic reflexes in mammals. We examined the role of vasopressin in the neurocardiogenic responses to mild, rapid hemorrhage (1 mL/100 g for 30 seconds) and severe hemorrhage (1 mL/100 g body wt for 30 seconds repeated three times at 11-minute intervals) in homozygous Brattleboro and Long-Evans rats. Mild, rapid hemorrhage induced severe bradycardia and hypotension only in Long-Evans rats. Exogenous vasopressin (1.85 pmol/kg per minute for 1 hour) restored both the bradycardic and hypotensive responses in Brattleboro rats. DDAVP, a vasopressin V2-receptor agonist (0.19 pmol/kg per minute for 24 hours), did not affect the cardiovascular responses to hemorrhage in Brattleboro rats, although it maintained urine production within normal limits. However, OPC-31260 (21.6 mumol/kg IV), a vasopressin V2-receptor antagonist, attenuated both the hypotensive and bradycardic responses to hemorrhage in Long-Evans rats. A vasopressin V1-receptor antagonist attenuated bradycardia and delayed the recovery of arterial pressure after hemorrhage but did not affect the hypotension that occurred immediately after hemorrhage in Long-Evans rats. Methylatropine also attenuated both the bradycardic and hypotensive responses induced by hemorrhage, but propranolol had no effect on the cardiovascular responses to hemorrhage in Long-Evans rats. The recovery of arterial pressure after repeated hemorrhage was less adequate in Brattleboro rats than in Long-Evans rats. Our results suggest that the neurocardiogenic responses to hemorrhage, especially hypotension, may be related to vasodilation induced by a V2-receptor-mediated mechanism and by the vagal reflex, both of which are substantiated by the existence of vasopressin. The coexistence of V1- and V2-receptor mechanisms may be necessary for the hypotensive response to hemorrhage. We found that a V2-receptor antagonist attenuated the hypotension mediated by the so-called neurocardiogenic reflex.
血管迷走反射,如低血压和心动过缓,可由快速出血诱发,并在哺乳动物中模拟神经心源性反射。我们研究了血管加压素在纯合布拉特洛维大鼠和长 Evans 大鼠对轻度、快速出血(1 mL/100 g,持续 30 秒)和严重出血(1 mL/100 g 体重,持续 30 秒,每隔 11 分钟重复三次)的神经心源性反应中的作用。轻度、快速出血仅在长 Evans 大鼠中诱发严重心动过缓和低血压。外源性血管加压素(1.85 pmol/kg 每分钟,持续 1 小时)恢复了布拉特洛维大鼠的心动过缓和低血压反应。去氨加压素,一种血管加压素 V2 受体激动剂(0.19 pmol/kg 每分钟,持续 24 小时),虽然能将尿量维持在正常范围内,但对布拉特洛维大鼠出血后的心血管反应没有影响。然而,血管加压素 V2 受体拮抗剂 OPC - 31260(21.6 μmol/kg 静脉注射)减弱了长 Evans 大鼠出血后的低血压和心动过缓反应。血管加压素 V1 受体拮抗剂减弱了心动过缓并延迟了出血后动脉压的恢复,但对长 Evans 大鼠出血后立即出现的低血压没有影响。甲基阿托品也减弱了出血诱发的心动过缓和低血压反应,但普萘洛尔对长 Evans 大鼠出血后的心血管反应没有影响。与长 Evans 大鼠相比,布拉特洛维大鼠反复出血后动脉压的恢复不太充分。我们的结果表明,对出血的神经心源性反应,尤其是低血压,可能与由 V2 受体介导的机制和迷走反射诱导的血管舒张有关,血管加压素的存在证实了这两种机制。V1 和 V2 受体机制的共存可能是出血后低血压反应所必需的。我们发现 V2 受体拮抗剂减弱了由所谓神经心源性反射介导的低血压。