Does centrally administered DADLE alter cardiac output and regional blood flow in conscious dogs?
Centrally administered enkephalins cause significant hemodynamic changes and blood flow redistribution in conscious dogs, primarily driven by their effects on ventilation, heart rate, and metabolism.
To investigate the effects of enkephalins on cardiac output and regional blood flow, we administered D-Ala-D-Leu-enkephalin (DADLE) intracisternally (ic) to 14 chronically instrumented unanesthetized dogs. Measurements were made at base line, 20, 45, and 75 min after DADLE (25 or 125 micrograms/kg) and 15 min after naloxone (5 micrograms/kg ic). After 125 micrograms/kg DADLE, all animals developed hypoventilation, bradycardia, and decreased O2 consumption without hypotension. Cardiac output decreased (-34%), but brain blood flow increased (+110%). Blood flow decreased to the diaphragm (-38%), heart (-21%), skeletal muscle (-40%), skin (-67%), pancreas (-79%), and gastrointestinal tract (-26%). After 25 micrograms/kg DADLE, there were no consistent changes in cardiac output or regional blood flow. Four additional animals (without DADLE) were exposed to altered inspired gases to reproduce the blood gas changes after DADLE. These animals developed hyperventilation without bradycardia and increased brain (+114%) and diaphragm (+649%) blood flow. We conclude that centrally administered enkephalins produce 1) a parallel decrease in ventilation, heart rate, O2 consumption, and cardiac output and 2) a major blood flow redistribution, primarily dictated by the effects of opioids on ventilation, heart rate, and metabolism.
Rosen et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: