Antihypertensive mechanism of action of ketanserin and some ketanserin analogues in the spontaneously hypertensive rat

Anders Pettersson, Kathryn Gradin, Thomas Hedner and Bengt Persson

View Related Documents

Abstract

Ketanserin is a new antihypertensive agent with affinity to serotonin (5-HT)2 receptors and at higher concentrations also to agr 1-adrenoceptors. The present study was designed to evaluate the relative functional importance of the antagonism of agr 1-adrenoreceptors and 5-HT2-receptors in the antihypertensive mechanism of action of ketanserin and analogues after acute administration. In the spontaneously hypertensive rat, ketanserin and the two ketanserin analogues, R56413 and R55667 (which have relatively weaker agr-adrenolytic properties) were studied with regard to their ability to reduce the blood pressure after acute administration in the conscious rat and their ability to shift the dose response curves for 5-HT and phenylephrine in the pithed rat. The agents tested reduced the blood pressure only in a dose range where they blocked agr 1-adrenoceptors and there was a striking correlation between the degree of hypotension and the degree of inhibition of the phenylephrine induced pressor responses. 5-HT2-receptor blockade alone did not influence basal blood pressure. However, following pretreatment with R55667 in a low dose the blood pressure reduction to prazosin was enhanced.
It is concluded that following acute administration in the rat the major portion of the antihypertensive response to ketanserin is due to an agr 1-adrenoceptor blockade but that the 5-HT2-receptor blockade contributes.

Key words  Ketanserin - Blood pressure - SHR

Fulltext Preview

Image of the first page of the fulltext document