McDougall J J, Elenko R D, Bray R C
McCaig Centre for Joint Injury and Arthritis Research, Department of Surgery, University of Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
J Auton Nerv Syst. 1998 Aug 6;72(1):55-60. doi: 10.1016/s0165-1838(98)00087-3.
The role of cholinergic nerves in joint vasomotor control was investigated in normal and chronically inflamed rat knees. Joint inflammation was induced by unilateral intraarticular injection of Freund's complete adjuvant and experiments were performed on both the ipsilateral and contralateral joints one and three weeks after treatment. Blood flow measurements of the exposed joints were obtained using a laser Doppler perfusion imager which provides relative changes in tissue perfusion. One week after adjuvant induction, basal perfusion in both ipsilateral and contralateral joints was significantly reduced compared to normal. At three weeks, ipsilateral knee perfusion had returned to normal, however, contralateral blood flow showed no such sign of recovery. Topical application of the muscarinic receptor antagonist atropine caused a fall in knee joint basal perfusion suggesting that cholinergic nerves are inherently involved in the physiological control of rat knee blood vessels. Acetylcholine chloride (10(-13)-10(-8) mol) in normal rats produced a dose-dependent vasodilatation of the articular microvasculature with the highest dose causing blood flow to increase by about 85%. This dilator response was attenuated in the ipsilateral monoarthritic joint at both one and three weeks post-injection while contralateral joints showed a normal response to acetylcholine at both of the time points tested. This study implicates cholinergic nerves in rat knee joint vasoregulation, however, the impairment of this mechanism by chronic inflammation could exacerbate the disease process by starving the joint of much needed vascular nourishment. Furthermore, the preservation of cholinergic responses in the contralateral knee despite a fall in basal perfusion suggests that alternative non-cholinergic mechanisms may be responsible for the hypoaemia in this joint.
在正常和慢性炎症大鼠膝关节中研究了胆碱能神经在关节血管舒缩控制中的作用。通过单侧关节内注射弗氏完全佐剂诱导关节炎症,并在治疗后1周和3周对同侧和对侧关节进行实验。使用激光多普勒灌注成像仪获得暴露关节的血流测量值,该成像仪可提供组织灌注的相对变化。佐剂诱导后1周,同侧和对侧关节的基础灌注与正常相比均显著降低。3周时,同侧膝关节灌注已恢复正常,然而,对侧血流未显示出这种恢复迹象。局部应用毒蕈碱受体拮抗剂阿托品导致膝关节基础灌注下降,提示胆碱能神经固有地参与大鼠膝关节血管的生理控制。正常大鼠中氯化乙酰胆碱(10^(-13)-10^(-8) mol)可使关节微血管产生剂量依赖性血管舒张,最高剂量使血流增加约85%。在注射后1周和3周,同侧单关节炎关节的这种舒张反应减弱,而对侧关节在两个测试时间点对乙酰胆碱均显示正常反应。本研究表明胆碱能神经参与大鼠膝关节血管调节,然而,慢性炎症对该机制的损害可能通过使关节缺乏急需的血管营养而加剧疾病进程。此外,尽管基础灌注下降,但对侧膝关节胆碱能反应得以保留,提示替代的非胆碱能机制可能是该关节贫血的原因。