scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Sympathetic denervation of the smooth muscle of the vas deferens.

A. T. Birmingham
- 01 Mar 1970 - 
- Vol. 206, Iss: 3, pp 645-661
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The post‐ganglionic nerve fibres to the vas deferens of the guinea‐pig and rat were interrupted in vivo by stripping one vas deferns of its serous coat; the other vas deferenns was left intact as a control.
Abstract
1. The post-ganglionic nerve fibres to the vas deferens of the guinea-pig and rat were interrupted in vivo by stripping one vas deferens of its serous coat; the other vas deferens was left intact as a control. 2. Four to eight days later the stripped vas deferens did not contract in response to electrical transmural stimulation in vitro at 0·1 msec pulse duration. Pulses of 1·0 msec duration produced small contractions which were not abolished by local anaesthetic or adrenergic neurone-blocking drugs. 3. Log dose—response curves to noradrenaline were, for stripped vasa deferentia, to the left of those for control vasa. The increase in sensitivity to noradrenaline at 8 days was about sixteenfold for rat vasa and about tenfold for guinea-pig vasa. Tyramine did not contract stripped vasa from guinea-pigs or rats. 4. The noradrenaline and adrenaline content of guinea-pig and rat vasa was greatly reduced or abolished 8 days after the stripping operation. 5. Fluorescent nerve terminals were usually absent when transverse sections of stripped vasa were examined by fluorescence microscopy after treatment by the formaldehyde condensation method for demonstrating catecholamines. 6. It is concluded that post-ganglionic sympathetic denervation is achieved by stripping the vas deferens in vivo of its serous coat and mesenteric attachments.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence against adrenergic motor transmission in the guinea-pig vas deferens

TL;DR: Field stimulation of desheathed preparations of guinea‐pig vas deferens, treated with a ganglion‐blocking agent, has revealed the presence of two tetrodotoxin‐susceptible components in the motor response, suggesting the existence of two sets of post‐ganglionic motor nerve fibres of different excitability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Arrangement, ultrastructure, and adrenergic innervation of smooth musculature of the ductuli efferentes, ductus epididymidis and ductus deferens of man

TL;DR: There is a gradual proximo-distal increase in the thickness of the muscle coat of the human ductuli efferentes, duetus epididymidis and ductus deferens, and noradrenergic nerves have been identified by the presence of small granular vesicles in preterminal varicose axon dilatations.
OtherDOI

Adrenergic Regulation of Vascular Smooth Muscle

TL;DR: This article describes the Morphological and Functional Plasticity of Adrenergic Neurons, and the Factors Influencing Development and Maturation of Peripheral Sympathetic Nerve Terminals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional and Structural Changes in the Rabbit Ear Artery after Sympathetic Denervation

TL;DR: The results indicate that an intact innervation is necessary for normal development and maintenance of the artery wall of white New Zealand rabbits, however, the precise consequences of this influence vary at different ages.
Book ChapterDOI

Factors Influencing the Concentration of Catecholamines at the Receptors

TL;DR: Any interpretation of the concentration of noradrenaline in the “biophase” involves two crucial assumptions, namely that, in the absence of conclusive evidence to the contrary, the interaction between drug and receptor as well as the function of the link between receptor activation and eventual response remains unaffected by the change in experimental conditions which is being studied.
References
More filters
Journal Article

Identification and chemical assay of norepinephrine in brain and other tissues.

TL;DR: Norepinephrine has been identified chemically as a normal constituent of brain and a simple, rapid fluorometric method for the estimation of catechol amines in brain and other tissues is described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Standardization Of Paraformaldehyde And Of Certain Procedures For The Histochemical Demonstration Of Catecholamines

TL;DR: The principles of a simple procedure for standardization of paraformaldehyde based on the finding that this substance takes up or loses water to constant levels when incubated at room temperature (20-22#{176}C) in an atmosphere of constant relative humidity are reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Correlation of fine structure and physiology of the innervation of smooth muscle in the guinea pig vas deferens.

TL;DR: An electron microscope study of the innervation of smooth muscle of the guinea pig vas deferens was undertaken in order to find a structural basis for recent electrophysiological observations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Preganglionic and postganglionic stimulation of the guinea-pig isolated vas deferens preparation.

TL;DR: These experiments show that when the guinea-pig vas deferens is removed without the hypogastric nerve and stimulated transmurally by the method described, contractions are produced mainly by excitation of postganglionic adrenergic nerves.
Journal ArticleDOI

Controlled formaldehyde-catecholamine condensation in cryostat sections to show adrenergic nerves by fluorescence.

TL;DR: Three sets of sections of freshly removed tissue are cut at 18 μ in a cryostat and dried on slides for 1.5 hr over P2O5 before being mounted in glycerol and viewed with a fluorescence microscope and at least one set of specimens shows optimal fluorescence.
Related Papers (5)