1918
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.1918.sp001825
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The vasodilator action of histamine and of some other substances

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Cited by 316 publications
(59 citation statements)
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“…We must, therefore, conclude either that the denervated vessels become abnormally sensitive to acid-base changes or that in the normal innervated vessels the peripheral constrictor effect of alkali is balanced by a depressant effect on the centre. In view of the finding by Dale & Richards (1918) that denervated vessels are hypersensitive to adrenaline and histamine once they have recovered their tone, the former explanation appears most likely, and it may now be suggested that this hypersensitivity to alkali may indeed be the factor responsible for the normal recovery of tone after denervation as in the perfusion experiments of Hemingway & McDowall (1926) and of McDowall (1928 a). This suggestion is of considerable practical importance as it is found that after sympathectomy in man, the increased flow produced decreases after a few days (Learmonth, 1949).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…We must, therefore, conclude either that the denervated vessels become abnormally sensitive to acid-base changes or that in the normal innervated vessels the peripheral constrictor effect of alkali is balanced by a depressant effect on the centre. In view of the finding by Dale & Richards (1918) that denervated vessels are hypersensitive to adrenaline and histamine once they have recovered their tone, the former explanation appears most likely, and it may now be suggested that this hypersensitivity to alkali may indeed be the factor responsible for the normal recovery of tone after denervation as in the perfusion experiments of Hemingway & McDowall (1926) and of McDowall (1928 a). This suggestion is of considerable practical importance as it is found that after sympathectomy in man, the increased flow produced decreases after a few days (Learmonth, 1949).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…BLOOD VESSELS OF SKELETAL MUSCLE It has been found in the present experiments that the dilator response to adrenaline may return a few hours after section of the sympathetic chain. Other observers, for example, Dale & Richards (1918), found that the response to adrenaline returns after a variable time, but did not suggest any reason for the variation. By the use of choralose anaesthesia it would appear that the capillaries can regain their tone very rapidly or it may never be lost, and the response to histamine may be present before that to adrenaline returns (Fig.…”
Section: Effect Of Adrenalinementioning
confidence: 95%
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“…Since there is usually a reversal of the motor response in isolated preparations when the dose of adrenaline is sufficiently reduced, it appears likely that only relaxation would result from the concentration of adrenaline normally occurring in the circulating blood. Dale and Richards (1918) have described a -similar type of reversal in the response of the blood vessels to adrenaline. A sufficiently great diminution in the dose of adrenaline may also change the response of the longitudinal muscle of the isolated rabbit ileum (Hoskins, 1912), but in this preparation it is the higher concentration of adrenaline which causes relaxation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…It is in these latter that special interest may arise. The fall of blood-pressure by histamine is the resultant of a strong peripheral dilator effect and a weak less peripheral constrictor effect [Dale and Richards, 1918]. Adenosine dilates the arterioles.…”
Section: Adenine Compounds 309mentioning
confidence: 99%