Objective - To characterize the cardiovascular response to IV administration of serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine [5-HT]) in calves Animals - 5 healthy unsedated Friesian calves. Procedure - 41 5-HT administrations were performed: 11 slow infusions (duration, 5 minutes) and 30 bolus infusions (duration, 5 seconds) Cardiovascular function values were recorded before, during, and after the infusions. Results - Slow infusion of 5-HT first resulted in a brief period of severe bradycardia, then in sustained tachycardia with a concomitant increase in cardiac output. Systemic blood pressure response to 5-HT was triphasic, with initial hypotension concomitant with bradycardia, then a pressor phase associated with an increase in systemic vascular resistance, and finally, a long-lasting hypotensive phase associated with decreased systemic vascular resistance. Pulmonary hypertension was associated with increased pulmonary vascular resistance, reflecting intense pulmonary vasoconstriction Bolus infusion at increasing dosages resulted in dose-dependent bradycardia and systemic hypotension, followed by dose-dependent systemic hypertension. Unlike with slow infusion, neither the second tachycardie nor the third systemic hypotensive phases were evident Conclusions - 5-HT induces dose-dependent cardiovascular responses, including a reflex response followed by pulmonary and systemic vasoconstriction, in healthy calves Clinical Relevance - Determining the type of serotonergic receptors responsible for these responses may help to determine whether 5-HT is involved in the mechanisms underlying brisket disease in cattle.
CITATION STYLE
Linden, A. S., Desmecht, D. J. M., Amory, H., Beduin, J. M., & Lekeux, P. M. (1996). Cardiovascular response to exogenous serotonin in healthy calves. American Journal of Veterinary Research, 57(5), 731–738. https://doi.org/10.2460/ajvr.1996.57.05.731
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