Influence of vasodilator substances on pulpal blood flow in the cat

Authors

  • Lennart Edwall The Department of Pharmacology and the Department of Endodontics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
  • Leif Olgart The Department of Pharmacology and the Department of Endodontics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
  • Glenn Haegerstam The Department of Pharmacology and the Department of Endodontics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/00016357309002516

Keywords:

Dental pulp, blood circulation, radioisotope scanning, vasodilator agents, cats

Abstract

The objective of the study was to determine the response in the pulpal blood flow to vasodilator substances at different levels of vasomotor tone.

Simultaneous determinations of iodide disappearance rate (k-value) from dentinal cavities and, as control, from the adjacent alveolar submucosa were performed on anesthetized cats. Changes in k-value reflected changes in blood flow. Close i.a. infusion of acetylcholine, histamine and bradykinin did not influence pulpal microcirculation when the sympathetic nervous tone was low. At a higher level of nervous vascular tone, obtained by direct electrical stimulation of the cut sympathetic cervical trunk, the substances were shown to increase the pulpal blood flow. Papaverine and warming had a more pronounced vasodilator influence on pulpal blood flow, suggesting the presence of a local myogenic vascular tone regulating the exchange function, which was unaffected by acetylcholine, histamine and bradykinin. These substances were thus shown to act as inhibitors of sympathetic vasoconstrictor tone in the cat pulp.

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Published

1973-01-01