Cardiovascular response to histamine during normoxaemia and hypoxaemia in piglets.
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Abstract
The cardiovascular effects of exogenously administered histamine were investigated in conscious newborn piglets aged 10-11 days during normoxia (21% (v/v) O2) and during isocapneic alveolar hypoxia (10% O2, 3% CO2, 87% N2) to determine its influence on preexisting vascular tone. In the first set of experiments (n = 6), four histamine doses (1,10,50,100 micrograms/kg) were tested in sequence during normoxia. Histamine was injected intravenously and cardiovascular variables were recorded. Heart rate increased at all doses studied. Pulmonary and systemic arterial pressures, cardiac output and stroke volume were unchanged at the low histamine doses (1 and 10 micrograms), but all decreased at the high doses (50 and 100 micrograms). Pulmonary and systemic vascular resistances were unchanged at each dose. In the second set of experiments (n = 7), two histamine doses (1 and 5 micrograms/kg) were administered during alveolar hypoxia. Hypoxia caused increases in heart rate and pulmonary arterial pressure and resistance. After injection of each dose of histamine, pulmonary pressure and resistance decreased but remained higher than baseline. No other measured cardiovascular variables were altered. Thus, during normoxia histamine did not alter vascular tone, but high doses did adversely affect myocardial function. During alveolar hypoxia histamine caused weak pulmonary vasodilation at doses that did not alter systemic vascular tone. Histamine is not a potent modifier of the circulation in the newborn piglet during conditions of normoxaemia or hypoxaemia.