Forced swim stress: supersensitivity of the isolated rat pacemaker to the chronotropic effect of isoprenaline and the role of corticosterone.

1994 
Abstract 1. 1. Forced swim (three daily sessions) resulted in an increased plasma corticosterone level and supersensitivity of the isolated rat pacemaker to the chronotropic effect of isoprenaline. 2. 2. Bilateral adrenalectomy, performed 2 days before forced swim, abolished the development of pacemaker supersensitivity to isoprenaline. 3. 3. Administration to rats of the antiglucorticoid compound RU-38486 prevented the development of pacemaker supersensitivity to isoprenaline. Pretreatment of rats not submitted to forced swim with the synthetic glucocorticoid RU-28362 causes pacemaker supersensitivity to isoprenaline. 4. 4. Pretreatment of rats with diazepam or imipramine which block the forced swim-induced increase in the plasma level of corticosterone prevented the development of pacemaker supersensitivity to isoprenaline. 5. 5. It is concluded that corticosterone plays a critical role in the modulation of the sensitivity to catecholamines of the pacemaker β-adrenoceptors during adaptation to repeated stress.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    27
    References
    12
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []