To determine whether the peripheral sympathetic neurons of subhuman primates are destroyed by guanacline treatment, we treated Macaca fasicularis with 2 or 20 mg/kg of guanethidine, guanacline, or the saturated analog of guanacline (SAG) 5 times per week for 4 or 12 weeks. All monkeys given 20 mg/kg of guanethidine, guanacline, or SAG showed a marked loss of neurons in the ganglia of the peripheral sympathetic nervous system. Treatment of macaques with 2 mg/kg of the guanidinium compounds resulted in patches of small-cell infiltrate, slight neuronal loss, and degenerative alterations in the sympathetic ganglia. Neuronal alterations in sympathetic ganglia of all treated monkeys were accompanied by a prominent heterogeneous infiltrate of mononuclear cells arranged primarily in a perivascular distribution and extending into the ganglionic neuropil. Peripheral sensory ganglia were unaffected. These histological findings are similar to those described in the guanethidine-induced immune-mediated sympathectomy, which has been extensively studied in the rat.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ana.410210109 | DOI Listing |
To determine whether the peripheral sympathetic neurons of subhuman primates are destroyed by guanacline treatment, we treated Macaca fasicularis with 2 or 20 mg/kg of guanethidine, guanacline, or the saturated analog of guanacline (SAG) 5 times per week for 4 or 12 weeks. All monkeys given 20 mg/kg of guanethidine, guanacline, or SAG showed a marked loss of neurons in the ganglia of the peripheral sympathetic nervous system. Treatment of macaques with 2 mg/kg of the guanidinium compounds resulted in patches of small-cell infiltrate, slight neuronal loss, and degenerative alterations in the sympathetic ganglia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGuanacline, a guanidinium adrenergic neuron blocking agent similar to guanethidine, was studied clinically and experimentally during the late 1960s. Like guanethidine, it has been reported to produce sympathetic neuronal destruction in rats. Unlike guanethidine, it has been reported to produce irreversible sympathetic deficits in man and to produce fluorescent lipopigment in rat sympathetic neurons.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF1 In acute experiments guanethidine was considerably more potent than guanacline in reducing contractile responses of the rat vas deferens to electrical stimulation of intramural nerves.2 Chronic treatment of rats for 19 weeks with guanethidine (5mg/kg, daily) reduced responses to electrical stimulation to 25% of control, potentiated responses to exogenous noradrenaline and depleted endogenous noradrenaline.3 After cessation of guanethidine treatment responses to electrical stimulation increased to 60% of control (in one week) but showed no further increase.
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