Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

FUNCTIONAL ANTAGONISM AS A MEANS OF DETERMINING DISSOCIATION CONSTANTS AND RELATIVE EFFICACIES OF SYMPATHOMIMETIC AMINES IN GUINEA‐PIG ISOLATED ATRIA

1979; Wiley; Volume: 66; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1476-5381.1979.tb10844.x

ISSN

1476-5381

Autores

Kenneth J. Broadley, C. D. Nicholson,

Tópico(s)

Insect Pheromone Research and Control

Resumo

The positive inotropic and chronotropic responses to sympathomimetic amines were examined in guinea‐pig isolated atria. The order of potency measured from EC 50 values was isoprenaline > orciprenaline > salbutamol ≥ fenoterol > terbutaline. Terbutaline and salbutamol were partial agonists on rate and together with orciprenaline and fenoterol also on tension responses. Functional antagonism by carbachol caused a rightwards shift of the dose‐response curve and depression of the maximum response. The rate maxima for orciprenaline, fenoterol and terbutaline were above that of isoprenaline. All the tension maxima were below isoprenaline. Dissociation constants ( K A ) and relative efficacies (e r ) were determined by analogy with irreversible antagonism. The relative orders of affinity ( K A ) were isoprenaline > orciprenaline > fenoterol > salbutamol > terbutaline. Affinities were identical on rate and tension. The relative efficacies were all greater than isoprenaline for rate responses. On tension they were the same or less than isoprenaline. The implications of these results are discussed, in particular the fact that a partial agonist has a greater efficacy than a full agonist.

Referência(s)