CARDIOTONIC ACTIVITY OF CERTAIN STEROIDS AND BILE SALTS
- 1 August 1952
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Medical Sciences
- Vol. 30 (4) , 325-332
- https://doi.org/10.1139/cjms52-041
Abstract
The effects of 23 plant and animal steroids, steroid hormones, and bile acids, and nine of their salts or soluble conjugates, have been investigated in isolated frog hearts. All but five of the compounds produced significant augmentation of frog hearts made hypodynamic by prolonged perfusion. The augmentation was not usually accompanied by changes in heart rate, and no steroid caused systolic arrest. Eight water-soluble steroid salts were perfused through isolated rabbit hearts when they had become hypodynamic by prolonged perfusion. In each case the coronary flow increased significantly whether the heart rate and force of contraction increased or not. Thus, when cardiotonic activity was observed, it appeared to be a direct effect and not secondary to the increased coronary flow. It would seem that the lactone ring of the cardiac glycoside molecule is responsible for the development of systolic arrest, and that the cardiotonic action is, at least partly, a function of the cyclopentenophenanthrene nucleus.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- ANTIBIOTIC LACTONES AND SYNTHETIC ANALOGS .2. CARDIOTONIC EFFECTS ON THE ISOLATED FROG HEART1949
- An outflow recorder useful for detecting small amounts of vasopressinThe Journal of Physiology, 1948
- THE EFFECT OF ALPHA-TOCOPHEROL PHOSPHATE, DIGITOXIN AND CERTAIN COMPOUNDS RELATED TO THE LATTER ON CARDIAC MUSCLE METABOLISM INVITRO1946
- The effects of whole bile and bile salts on the innervated and the denervated heartAmerican Heart Journal, 1940
- The effects of whole bile and bile salts on the perfused heartAmerican Heart Journal, 1939