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  3. Arteriolar vasoconstrictive response: comparing the effects of arginine vasopressin and norepinephrine
 

Arteriolar vasoconstrictive response: comparing the effects of arginine vasopressin and norepinephrine

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.20405
Date of Publication
2006
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Universitätsklinik fü...

Contributor
Friesenecker, Barbara E
Tsai, Amy G
Martini, Judith
Ulmer, Hanno
Wenzel, Volker
Hasibeder, Walter R
Intaglietta, Marcos
Dünser, Martin Wolfgang
Universitätsklinik für Intensivmedizin
Series
Critical care
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1364-8535
Publisher
BioMed Central
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1186/cc4922
PubMed ID
16696866
Description
INTRODUCTION: This study was designed to examine differences in the arteriolar vasoconstrictive response between arginine vasopressin (AVP) and norepinephrine (NE) on the microcirculatory level in the hamster window chamber model in unanesthetized, normotonic hamsters using intravital microscopy. It is known from patients with advanced vasodilatory shock that AVP exerts strong additional vasoconstriction when incremental dosage increases of NE have no further effect on mean arterial blood pressure (MAP). METHODS: In a prospective controlled experimental study, eleven awake, male golden Syrian hamsters were instrumented with a viewing window inserted into the dorsal skinfold. NE (2 microg/kg/minute) and AVP (0.0001 IU/kg/minute, equivalent to 4 IU/h in a 70 kg patient) were continuously infused to achieve a similar increase in MAP. According to their position within the arteriolar network, arterioles were grouped into five types: A0 (branch off small artery) to A4 (branch off A3 arteriole). RESULTS: Reduction of arteriolar diameter (NE, -31 +/- 12% versus AVP, -49 +/- 7%; p = 0.002), cross sectional area (NE, -49 +/- 17% versus AVP, -73 +/- 7%; p = 0.002), and arteriolar blood flow (NE, -62 +/- 13% versus AVP, -80 +/- 6%; p = 0.004) in A0 arterioles was significantly more pronounced in AVP animals. There was no difference in red blood cell velocities in A0 arterioles between groups. The reduction of diameter, cross sectional area, red blood cell velocity, and arteriolar blood flow in A1 to A4 arterioles was comparable in AVP and NE animals. CONCLUSION: Within the microvascular network, AVP exerted significantly stronger vasoconstriction on large A0 arterioles than NE under physiological conditions. This observation may partly explain why AVP is such a potent vasopressor hormone and can increase systemic vascular resistance even in advanced vasodilatory shock unresponsive to increases in standard catecholamine therapy.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/94135
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