Journal article
Sympathetic vasoconstriction is potentiated in arteries caudal but not rostral to a spinal cord transection in rats
NM Rummery, D Tripovic, EM McLachlan, JA Brock
Journal of Neurotrauma | Published : 2010
Abstract
Sympathetic nerve-mediated contractions of mesenteric and tail arteries controlled by preganglionic neurones decentralized by a spinal cord injury (SCI) are potentiated, and likely contribute to autonomic dysreflexia. However, reactivity to the α1-adrenoceptor agonist phenylephrine has been reported to be enhanced in vascular beds controlled by preganglionic neurones lying both rostral and caudal to an SCI in vivo. Here responses of isometrically-mounted median and saphenous arteries isolated from rats 2 and 8 weeks after transection of the T4 spinal cord have been compared with those from sham-operated rats. After SCI, contractions of median arteries to perivascular nerve stimulation, to α-..
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Grants
Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia
Funding Acknowledgements
This study was supported by a Program Grant from the New South Wales Spinal Cord Injury and Related Neurological Conditions Research Grants Program. J.A.B. is supported by a Fellowship Grant (350904) from the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia.