Direct Renal Vasodilatation Produced by Dopamine in the Dog
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TL;DR: It is suggested that the ability of dopamine to alter the distribution of cardiac output in favor of visceral organs may find useful clinical applications and the probable basis for the effect of intravenous dopamine infusion on renal blood flow is its direct renal vasodilating action.
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Abstract: The effects on directly measured renal blood flow, mean blood pressure, and calculated renal vascular resistance of intravenous infusions of dopamine, isoproterenol, and norepinephrine were compared. Dopamine, at doses not affecting mean blood pressure, decreased renal vascular resistance and increased renal blood flow. In contrast, isoproterenol decreased both blood pressure and renal vascular resistance but did not consistently increase renal blood flow. Renal artery injection of dopamine produced vasodilatation at doses ranging from 0.75 to 12 µg and biphasic flow responses including transient vasoconstriction at higher doses. It is concluded that the probable basis for the effect of intravenous dopamine infusion on renal blood flow is its direct renal vasodilating action.
The direct effect of dopamine on the femoral vascular bed is vasoconstriction. The combination of renal vasodilating, and femoral vasoconstricting, effects is unique and is interpreted as evidence for a renal vasodilating effect of dopamine distinct from the conventional beta-adrenergic mechanism. A possible physiological role for dopamine other than as a precursor to norepinephrine may be related to this property. It is also suggested that the ability of dopamine to alter the distribution of cardiac output in favor of visceral organs may find useful clinical applications.
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References
Sodium diuresis produced by dopamine in patients with congestive heart failure.
TL;DR: Recent attempts to use sympathomimetic amines for such therapy have not been successful, and administration of mephentermine to patients with congestive heart failure was without beneficial effect.
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•Journal Article
A proposed mechanism for the depressor effect of dopamine in the anesthetized dog
TL;DR: The effect of intravenous dopamine on systemic blood pressure in the anesthetized dog was shown to be the result of a balance between vasoconstriction in some beds (carotid and femoral) and vasodilation in others (superior mesenteric, renal, and celiac).
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•Journal Article
Role of L-DOPA decarboxylase in the biosynthesis of catecholamines in nervous tissue and the adrenal medulla.
TL;DR: The role played by L-dopa decarboxylase in the biosynthesis of catecholamines depends on the organ in which the primary product of its action, i.e., dopamine, is formed.
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