Vasoconstriction of the isolated communicating cerebral artery induced by field electrical stimulation

Abstract
The vasoconstrictor effect elicited by field electrical stimulation of the posterior communicating cerebral artery of the goat was analyzed before and after treatment with pharmacological agents to find out if the adrenergic system was involved in this response. For this purpose, trains of 300 square wave pulses (1-32 Hz, 0.5 msec.) at supramaximal voltage were applies to these arteries producing a frequency-dependent increase in tension. The vasoconstrictor response was significantly reduced by tetrodotoxin (3 x 10(-6) M), phentolamine (10(-6) M) and bretylium (5 x 10(-4) M), but it was not modified by cocaine (10(-6) M). The contraction produced by electrical stimulation of arterial segments from goats pretreated with reserpine (0.02 mg/kg/day for three days) and from goats on which a bilateral superior cervical gangliectomy had been performed 12 days previously, was significantly reduced as compared with controls. These results show that a large part of the vasoconstrictor response of the goat cerebral vessels to field electrical stimulation is mediated by an adrenergic mechanism.