SOME EVIDENCE FOR THE MATURITY OF PERIPHERAL ADRENERGIC NERVES IN NEW‐BORN GUINEA‐PIGS

Abstract
The fluorescence histochemical technique of Falck and Hillarp revealed a similar distribution and density of peripheral adrenergic nerves in new-born and adult guinea-pigs. The accumulation of tritiated noradrenaline by tracheae from new-born guinea-pigs, assumed to be uptake into adrenergic nerves, was not less than the accumulation by tracheae from adult animals. There was equal potentiation by cocaine (1 10- 5M) of responses to noradrenaline on tracheal chain preparations taken from new-born and adult guinea-pigs. The evidence supports the hypothesis that the guinea-pig has a functional, well differentiated peripheral adrenergic nervous system at birth. This would account for the apparent inability to produce a long-lasting sympathectomy by administration of 6-hydroxydopamnie to new-born guinea-pigs.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: