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Title: Regional differences in the responses of guinea-pig cardiac tissue to carbachol and their potentiation by hypothermia. Author: Broadley KJ, MacLeod KM, Rodgers RL, McNeill JH. Journal: J Pharmacol Exp Ther; 1985 Jul; 234(1):222-7. PubMed ID: 4009502. Abstract: The responses of guinea-pig isolated cardiac tissues to carbachol were examined. Tension responses of paced left atria and right ventricular papillary muscles, rate responses of spontaneously beating right atria and working hearts and contractility (+dP/dt) of paced and unpaced working hearts were obtained at 38 degrees C. Carbachol induced negative inotropic and chronotropic responses of atria, abolishing tension and rate at the maxima. The spontaneously beating heart also exhibited negative chronotropy. The papillary muscles displayed partial inhibition of tension but, in tissues from reserpine-pretreated animals, negative inotropy was absent. Similarly, no reduction of contractility of paced working hearts was obtained. It was concluded that muscarinic receptors mediating a direct inhibition of ventricular muscle are virtually absent and that the small response obtained in untreated tissue may be due either to inhibition of endogenous catecholamine release via presynaptic receptors or to antagonism of released norepinephrine. Lowering the temperature to 30 or 25 degrees C affected resting tension, rate and contractility and the magnitude of carbachol responses. The concentration-response curves, when plotted as a percentage of the maximum, were displaced to the left by cooling of the atria and papillary muscles. The papillary muscles now exhibited a response after reserpine pretreatment. In working hearts, the concentration-response curves for the fall in spontaneous rate were also shifted to the left, but this was not significant, probably because the temperature could be reduced to only 30 degrees C, below which contractions ceased. Cooling of guinea-pig isolated cardiac preparations therefore induced supersensitivity to the muscarinic effects of carbachol.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]