Abstract
1. Pressure-flow relationships in the hind limb, perfused with blood at a series of constant flows, have been compared in primigravid and virgin rabbits following section of the lumbar sympathetic chain. 2. In the absence of sympathetic stimulation perfusion pressure was lower (P less than 0.05) in the pregnant rabbits at all levels of flow to the leg. 3. It is concluded that pregnancy leads to a reduction in the vascular resistance of the acutely sympathectomized hind limb. 4. The pressure-flow curves of hind limbs from pregnant and non-pregnant rabbits in which the cutaneous circulation had been excluded by skinning the leg and ligating the ankle were also compared. Again, perfusion pressure at each flow level was lower in the limbs from the pregnant animals (P less than 0.05). 5. The sympathetic supply was stimulated at frequencies of 0.3, 1, 3, 7, 15 and 30 Hz. Irrespective of whether the cutaneous circulation was excluded, the pressure-flow curves for the hind limbs of pregnant and non-pregnant rabbits were different at the lower frequencies. As stimulus frequency rose this difference became smaller, and at a stimulus frequency of 7-15 Hz or more there was little difference in the position of the curves in pregnant and non-pregnant rabbits. 6. Examination of the pressure-flow curves suggests that when, as in these experiments, flow is held constant, the ability of sympathetic stimulation to increase the resistance to blood flow is reduced in pregnancy. However, if these pressure-flow curves are used to predict the change of flow that would occur at a constant perfusion pressure, the response to sympathetic stimulation appears to be greater in pregnancy. 7. Further analysis of the findings, based on certain assumptions, suggests that differences between the pressure-flow curves of pregnant and non-pregnant animals during sympathetic stimulation are due in the main to either a differing size of the unstimulated vascular beds or a differing compliance of their vessel walls, rather than to any intrinsic alteration in their response to sympathetic stimulation.
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Selected References
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