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British Journal of Pharmacology and Chemotherapy logoLink to British Journal of Pharmacology and Chemotherapy
. 1961 Oct;17(2):176–195. doi: 10.1111/j.1476-5381.1961.tb01278.x

Actions of triethylcholine on neuromuscular transmission

W C Bowman, M J Rand
PMCID: PMC1482054  PMID: 13872107

Abstract

The effects of the triethyl analogue of choline (triethyl 2-hydroxyethyl ammonium) on muscular activity have been studied in conscious rabbits, chicks, dogs and a cat. The contractions of the tibialis anticus and soleus muscles of cats under chloralose anaesthesia, and of the tibialis anticus muscle of rabbits under urethane anaesthesia and the isolated diaphragm preparation of the rat were also used. In conscious animals, triethylcholine caused a slowly developing muscular weakness which was more severe after exercise and which resembled the symptoms of myasthenia gravis. In nerve-muscle preparations triethylcholine had a selective action in reducing the contractions of muscles elicited by a high rate of nerve stimulation while leaving unaffected the contractions caused by slower rates of stimulation. During the paralysis of the tibialis muscle of the cat produced by triethylcholine, action potentials recorded from the motor nerve were unaffected and the muscle responded normally to injected acetylcholine and to direct electrical stimulation. The failure of neuromuscular transmission produced by triethylcholine was reversed by injection of choline, but anticholinesterases were ineffective. Choline reduced the toxicity of triethylcholine in mice. It is concluded that triethylcholine produces transmission failure at the neuromuscular junction by interfering with the ability of the nerve endings to synthesize acetylcholine. The possibility that triethylcholine is itself acetylated by the nerve endings and released as an inactive neurohormone is discussed. It was shown that triethylcholine was devoid of depolarizing action and curare-like blocking action. It possesses a transient ganglion blocking action of the tetraethylammonium-type as shown in experiments in which it caused a fall in blood pressure and blocked the response of the nictitating membrane to pre- but not to post-ganglionic stimulation of the cervical sympathetic nerve.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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