Effects of dopamine on the carotid chemosensory response to hypoxia in newborn kittens

1993 
In a previous study, it has been shown that bolus injections of dopamine could either stimulate or inhibit the carotid chemosensory discharge in the kitten (Marchal et al., 1992a). To further characterize dopaminergic mechanisms in the carotid body during development, the effects of a continuous infusion of dopamine on carotid chemosensory activity in air, hypoxia (8%° 02 in NJ and hyperoxia (100~o 02) were studied in ten anesthetized, paralyzed and artificially ventilated kittens, aged 1 to 2l days and in three adult cats. One carotid sinus nerve was prepared for recording the activity of a single or a few chemosensory afferents. In the kittens, the immediate effect of dopamine at the onset of infusion (10 #g/kg/min) was an inhibition of the discharge in five kittens, a progressive excitation in four and no change in one. Four min- utes after the onset of dopamine infusion, there was a significant increase in chemosensory activity both in room air (from 4.5 _+ 0.8 impulse/sec to 8.8 + 1.4 impulse/sec, mean + SEM, P<0.05) and in hypoxia (from 24.6 + 3.7 impulse/sec to 33.4+_5.3 impulse/sec, P<0.05) but not in hyperoxia (0.5 + 0.2 impulse/sec w~ 0.7 + 0.3 impulse/sec). The adult cats received four successive dopamine infusions at the rate of 2.5, 5, 7.5 and 10/2g/kg/min, in an attempt to establish a dose-response relationship. The effects of dopamine infusions were consistent within, but variable between, cats. The onset of dopamine infusion was associated with an inhibition of the discharge in two cats, at all infusion rates. In one of them, chemosensory activity returned quickly to control and the response to hypoxia was enhanced. In the other cat, the inhibition of the discharge persisted for the duration of the infusion, and the response to hypoxia was inhibited. In the third cat, dopamine had no effect on the chemosensory discharge. The patterns of chemosensory responses evoked by dopamine are qualitatively similar in kittens and cats, but the excitatory type of response appear to be more readily elicited in the kitten.
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