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4 - Neurohumoral regulation of vascular tone
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- By Kirsty M. McCulloch, Department of Pharmacology, Quintiles Ltd, Edinburgh, John C. McGrath, Institute of Biomedical and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow
- Edited by Beverley J. Hunt, University of London, Lucilla Poston, University of London, Michael Schachter, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, London, Alison W. Halliday, St George's Hospital, London
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- Book:
- An Introduction to Vascular Biology
- Published online:
- 07 September 2009
- Print publication:
- 25 July 2002, pp 70-92
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
Introduction
The primary factors which govern blood flow to organs and tissues are perfusion pressure and the overall calibre of the small-resistance arteries and arterioles, which together constitute the major resistance to blood flow. The total active tension of the vascular smooth muscle in a segment of blood vessel wall, i.e. vascular tone, is influenced in vivo by numerous factors which fall into two broad categories: firstly, local or intrinsic control, which includes physical forces, myogenic responses, tissue metabolites and autocoids; and secondly, extrinsic neurohumoral regulation, which involves the action of autonomic nerves and circulating endocrine secretions.
Historically, the investigation of neurohumoral regulation of vascular tone has essentially centred, since the start of the twentieth century, on the action of catecholamines and acetylcholine (ACh) released from perivascular nerves, and catecholamine release from the adrenal medulla into the blood stream (Bevan et al., 1980; Burnstock, 1980), although it took well into the century before it was appreciated that these were the issues involved. With hindsight, this can be attributed to the early identification of adrenaline (epinephrine) in the adrenal gland and to the early availability of blocking drugs which turned out to be antagonists of adrenergic and cholinergic receptors, and to the rather later ability to identify ACh and noradrenaline (NA: norepinephrine). The approach was largely pharmacological.