| Literature DB >> 3443599 |
W G Dail1, L McGuffee, N Minorsky, S Little.
Abstract
1. The mechanical response to drugs and to electrical stimulation of nerves was investigated in isolated strips of intrinsic smooth muscle from the corpora cavernosa penis of the rat. 2. Noradrenaline caused muscle strips to contract in a dose-dependent manner. Contractions could be blocked by pretreatment with the alpha-adrenoreceptor antagonist, phentolamine. 3. Acetylcholine and carbachol had no effect on the baseline tension of muscle strips. Both drugs were relatively ineffective in relaxing noradrenaline-contracted strips. 4. Field stimulation of isolated muscle strips elicited contractions which were blocked by tetrodotoxin and greatly attenuated with phentolamine or reserpine pretreatment. Acetylcholine inhibited the excitatory response to field stimulation. This inhibitory effect of acetylcholine could be blocked with atropine. 5. Field stimulation of noradrenaline-contracted muscle strips caused relaxation. This inhibitory effect, due to nerves which arise from the pelvic plexus, is unaffected by substances which act on cholinergic systems. 6. The results suggest that the erectile muscle of the rat is similar to that of man in that it receives an excitatory noradrenergic innervation and an inhibitory innervation which may have a non-cholinergic component. Although acetylcholine may have a role in penile physiology of the rat, it is unlikely that it has a postsynaptic action.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 1987 PMID: 3443599 DOI: 10.1111/j.1474-8673.1987.tb00157.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Auton Pharmacol ISSN: 0144-1795