Summary: The effects of i.v. ketamine on arterial pressure and heart rate were examined in pithed rats, rabbits and cats. In all three species ketamine caused a brief decrease in arterial pressure and heart rate. In the rat, but not in the other two species, this initial decrease in arterial pressure was followed by a pressor response which was resistant to α-adrenoceptor blockade, depletion of tissue noradrenaline stores and adrenalectomy. It is concluded that the peripherally mediated pressor response found in the pithed rat is specific to this species, is not a result of liberation of peripheral catecholamines and does not explain the pressor effect of ketamine found in man and several animal species. © 1976 Macmillan Journals Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Clanachan, A. S., Mcgrath, J. C., & Mackenzie, J. E. (1976). Cardiovascular effects of ketamine in the pithed rat, rabbit and cat. British Journal of Anaesthesia, 48(10), 935–939. https://doi.org/10.1093/bja/48.10.935
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