Vascular responses to prostaglandin F 2 alpha in isolated cat lungs.
- 1 June 1975
- journal article
- abstracts
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 36 (6) , 706-712
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.36.6.706
Abstract
Changes in perfusion pressure in response to graded doses of prostaglandin F 2 alpha (PGF 2 alpha) were measured during both forward and retrograde perfusion of isolated cat lungs perfused at a constant flow rate. During forward perfusion, PGF 2 alpha produced a dose-dependent increase in pulmonary artery pressure and a decrease in lung fluid volume. During retrograde perfusion, PGF 2 alpha also produced a dose-dependent increase in perfusion pressure; however, the dose required was fivefold greater than that needed to produce an identical change in pressure during forward perfusion. In addition, during retrograde perfusion, the lung fluid volume increased in response to PGF 2 alpha. These results suggest that the major site of activity of PGF 2 alpha is on the arterial side of the pulmonary vascular bed and that inactivation of PGF 2 alpha by the lung occurs primarily distal to this arterial site of vasomotion. The changes in perfusion pressure in response to PGF 2 alpha were markedly dependent on pH and oxygen tension (Po-2), being abolished by severe alkalosis and potentiated by both acidosis and hypoxia. In contrast, neither serotonin nor norepinephrine exhibited such a pH or Po-2 dependency. Since the ratio of the forward response to the retrograde response was not decreased by alterations of pH or Po-2, their influence on the responses appears to be through interaction at the site of vascular activity rather than through alteration of the rate of prostaglandin inactivation.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pulmonary Alveolar Hypoxia: Release of Prostaglandins and Other Humoral MediatorsScience, 1974
- Influence of Prostaglandins E1 and F2 on Pulmonary Vascular Resistance in the SheepExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1974
- Effects of Prostaglandins E1 and F2 on the Swine Pulmonary CirculationExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1974
- Inhibition of Prostaglandin Synthesis and the Response of Baboon Cerebral Circulation to Carbon DioxideNature New Biology, 1973
- Pulmonary hypertension caused by minute amounts of endotoxin in calves.Journal of Applied Physiology, 1972
- Sites of pulmonary vasomotor reactivity in the dog during alveolar hypoxia and serotonin and histamine infusionJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1971
- Inactivation of Prostaglandins by the LungsNature, 1970
- Prostaglandins: Their Disappearance from and Release into the CirculationNature, 1967
- The isolation and determination of prostaglandins in lungs of sheep, guinea pig, monkey and manBiochemical Pharmacology, 1965