This study was undertaken to assess the importance of muscarinic receptor subtypes in equine airway disease. Smooth muscle strips from the mid-cervical portion of the trachea of horses were placed in tissue baths and isometric contractile force was measured. Active force was measured in response to metacholine and the selective muscarinic receptor agonists McN-A-343 (M1-selective) and pilocarpine (M2-selective) in cumulative concentrations (10(-9)M through 10(-3)M), with and without preincubation with three or four concentrations of the selective muscarinic receptor antagonists pirenzepine (M1-selective), methoctramine (M2-selective), and 4-DAMP (M3-selective). The tissues contracted in response to all muscarinic agonists. The maximum responses (mean +/- sem) were 86.7 +/- 6.2 g for metacholine, 27.1 +/- 2.5 g for McN-A-343 and 37.6 +/- 3.5 g for pilocarpine. Preincubation with the selective muscarinic receptor antagonists resulted in dose-dependent rightward shifts of the concentration-effect curves for metacholine. pA2 values (means +/- sem) were 8.88 +/- 0.30 for 4-DAMP, 6.53 +/- 0.38 for methoctramine, and 6.72 +/- 0.31 for pirenzepine. Preincubation with 10(-7) M 4-DAMP resulted in a rightward shift of the concentration-effect curves for McN-A-343 and pilocarpine. These results indicate that the most important muscarinic receptor mediating contraction of equine tracheal smooth muscle is of the M3-type. Therefore relatively low concentrations of a M3-selective muscarinic receptor antagonist will inhibit acetylcholine-induced contraction of equine airway smooth muscle.
Eighty-five cattle (calves and yearlings) were allowed 1000 kg of onions (Allium cepa) a day. Signs of poisoning were observed after five days; 22 animals were affected, one fatally. New illnesses continued to occur for five days after the withdrawal of onions from the diet. Clinical signs included inappetance, tachycardia, staggering and collapse, with jaundiced conjunctivae and haemoglobinuria. Haemolytic anaemia with Heinz bodies in the red cells and leucocytosis were demonstrated.
This paper describes the influence of stress, immediately before a massive inoculation of a logphase P. huemolyticu A 1 culture in brain-heart-infusion broth by fiberoptic bronchoscopy in 5 months old conventional calves.Differences in phagocytic cell function and numbers, lung function and lung tissue damage between stressed and non-stressed, infected calves were studied.Compared with the non-stressed calves before infection, the superoxide generation by blood polymorphonuclear leucocytes of the stressed animals was markedly reduced immediately after a 2 hours stress period, but it recovered within 3 days.The total numbers of phagocytic cells, harvested from lung lavage fluid 3 days after inoculation were twice as high in the non-stressed calves than in the stressed calves. In contrast, no differences in pulmonary lesions and functions were found between stressed or non-stressed calves. The role of several stress factors on infiltration and metabolic response of polymorphonuclear leucocytes in P. haemolyticu infections and the effects of bacterial endotoxin and leukotoxin on alveolar and vascular injury are discussed. U. S. Copyright Clearance Center Code Statement: 093 1 -184X/90/3707-0525$02.50/0
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