Lec 8- ANS 5+6 Flashcards

1
Q

Adrenoceptor agonists- A1

A

-Adrenaline used in treatment of cardiac arrest and anaphylaxis
A1- adrenoceptor agonist:
- Phenylephrine
-Smooth muscle contraction, except GI tract (baroreceptor reflex –> bradycardia)
-Used in acute hypotension or as topical nasal decongestant

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2
Q

Adrenoceptor agonist- A2

A
  • Clonidine

- Antihypertensive effect due to action at pre-synaptic receptors

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3
Q

Adrenoceptor agonist- B1

A
  • Dobutamine
  • increase HR and force of contraction
  • Used in acute HF
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4
Q

Adrenoceptor B2

A
  • Salbutamol and terbutaline
  • Smooth muscle relaxation (endothelium dependent)
  • Used in asthma
  • B2- adrenoceptor agonists (clenbuterol)–> Increase rate and force of skeletal muscle contraction, increased muscle mass and tremor (via PKA mediated facilitation of presynaptic Ca2+ influx leading to acetylcholine release)
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5
Q

Adrenoceptor antagonist- Alpha

A

Non-selective e.g. phenoxybenzamine, phentolamine
-Decrease BP (A1) but also enhance reflex tachycardia (A2)
Selective A1-antagonists e.g. doxazosin, prazosin
-Used in hypertension and benign prostatic hypertrophy (decrease tone in smooth muscle of bladder neck and prostate)
-Tamsulosin is selective for A1a receptors in urinary tract

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6
Q

Adrenoceptor antagonists-A2 selective

A
  • Selective A2 antagonists = yohimbine

- Not clinically used

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7
Q

Adrenoceptor antagonists- B

A
  • Non selective- propranolol
  • Partial agonists- oxprenolol
  • Selective B1-antagonists- atenolol
  • Labetolol and carvedilol are mixed A and B antagonists
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8
Q

Adrenoceptors antagonists-B effects

A
  • Decrease BP by decrease CO, decrease renin release, decrease sympathetic output from CNS
  • Reflex vasoconstriction preserved
  • Little effect at rest but pronounced during exercise or excitement
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9
Q

Adrenoceptor antagonists- uses and side effects B antagonists

A
  • Treat cardiac arrhythmias; angina; AMI; HF
  • Side effects: bronchoconstriction in asthma B2; Heart block and cold extremities B2; mask symptoms of hypoglycemia; nightmares (lipid soluble)
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10
Q

Dales principles

A

-A mature neurone releases the same transmitter at all of its synapses
This is now outdated:
-Co-transmission is the norm
-Presynaptic modulation –> different transmitter released
-Transmitter release can change during development/injury
-Different transmitters from different terminals

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11
Q

Neuromodulation- how easy or hard it is to react to something

A
  • Difficult to distinguish from neurotransmission
  • Generally slower (seconds- days vs milliseconds)
  • Act via a secondary messenger system (vs ligand-gated ion channels)
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12
Q

NANC transmission in the CNS

A

Non-adrenergic Non-cholinergic transmitters

  • Ganglionic transmission: substance P; 5-HT; GABA: dopamine
  • Post ganglionic terminals: NO; ATP: vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP); neuropeptide Y (NPY)
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13
Q

NANC homotropic autoinhibition (pre-synaptic inhibition)

A
  • activation of presynaptic autoreceptors inhibits further release of neurotransmitter in cholinergic and adrenergic neurons
  • NA when release acts on A2
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14
Q

NANC heterotrophic presynaptic inhibition

A
  • Noradrenaline inhibits ACh release from parasympathetic terminals in the intestine
  • Mutual inhibition in the heart
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15
Q

Presynaptic modulation

A
  • Presynaptic modulation is usually inhibitory; But at the MNJ stimulation of presynaptic autoreceptors enhances ACh release (see Lec 2+3)
  • Co transmitters or other factors can affect transmitter release
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16
Q

5-HT Serotonin

A

Actions on the ANS

  • Inhibits the release of NA from sympathetic nerve terminals
  • -> vasodilation in some blood vessels
  • -> indirect excitatory effect on enteric neurons –> stimulates GI motility
17
Q

Postsynaptic modulation

A
  • Mediators act to modify excitability or spontaneous firing of post-synaptic structure
  • Neuropeptide Y (NPY) enhances NA-mediated vasoconstriction via increasing the ability of NA to cause intracellular Ca2+ release
18
Q

ATP

A
  • Stored in synaptic vesicles in adrenergic and cholinergic nerve terminals
  • Functions as a fast transmitter at autonomic ganglia; acts on P2x receptors- ligand-gated ion channels
  • Co-transmitter with NA in sympathetic nerves: initial contraction of smooth muscle due to ATP (relaxation of GI tract)
  • Co-transmitter in parasympathetic nervous system; contraction of the bladder
19
Q

Peptide mediators

A
  • Acts on GPCR’s
  • precursors packed into vesicles in the cell body; active peptide generated within vesicle as it moves to nerve terminal
  • NPY enhances NA-mediated vasoconstriction
  • Salivary glands (parasympathetic): VIP –> vasodilation; ACh –> secretion
20
Q

Nitric oxide

A
  • Formed from L-arginine by action of nitric oxide synthesis (NOS)
  • Activates adenylate cyclase (Increase cAMP)
  • pulmonary vasodilation, gastric emptying, penile erection: sildenafil potentiates effect of NO by inhibiting breakdown of cGMP
21
Q

ATP and NA co-transmission

A
  • ATP and NA are packed in the same vesicle
  • ATP is released and works on ion channels giving a fast and fleeting response
  • NA acts on GPCRs so gives a slower and longer acting response together they cause longer term Ca2+ influx so longer contraction
  • NPY can be added to give to increase the effectiveness of NA so last far longer
22
Q

Parasympathetic co-transmission

A
  • ACh works on GPCRs but is the quickest
  • Then NO acts
  • VIP is then the slowest response (particularly in saliva VIP gives you vasodilation meaning there is sufficient blood flow to the gland so saliva production is maintained)