1994
DOI: 10.1111/j.1476-5381.1994.tb14853.x
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Effect of subthreshold ouabain on the tone of guinea‐pig aortic strips following repeated noradrenaline stimulation

Abstract: 1 The effect of ouabain at a concentration (0.8;pM) that does not induce contractile response in guinea-pig aortic strips has been studied on endothelium-denuded strips repeatedly stimulated with 1 AM noradrenaline or 60 mM K+ applied for 5 min every 30 min. 2 The resting tone (i.e. the tone between one noradrenaline stimulation and the following) of the aortic strips exposed to ouabain increased progressively, whereas the control strips (no ouabain) completely relaxed on washout of the agonist. In the aortic … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Norbormide, although less potent than verapamil, is as effective as verapamil in relaxing these vessels. In guinea-pig and rat aorta, norbormide, at concentrations effective against the contraction induced by depolarization, is ineffective on the contraction induced by phenylephrine, a feature that has been observed also for verapamil (Bova et al, 1994) and diltiazem (Cauvin et al, 1984). Likewise, in A7r5 cells both norbormide and verapamil inhibit intracellular calcium transients induced by depolarization, while they do not affect the increase in [Ca2+]i elicited by 5-hydroxytryptamine.…”
Section: Vasorelaxant Effect Of Normidementioning
confidence: 65%
“…Norbormide, although less potent than verapamil, is as effective as verapamil in relaxing these vessels. In guinea-pig and rat aorta, norbormide, at concentrations effective against the contraction induced by depolarization, is ineffective on the contraction induced by phenylephrine, a feature that has been observed also for verapamil (Bova et al, 1994) and diltiazem (Cauvin et al, 1984). Likewise, in A7r5 cells both norbormide and verapamil inhibit intracellular calcium transients induced by depolarization, while they do not affect the increase in [Ca2+]i elicited by 5-hydroxytryptamine.…”
Section: Vasorelaxant Effect Of Normidementioning
confidence: 65%