CQUniversity
Browse

Cardiovascular effects of toxin(s) of the Australian paralysis tick, Ixodes holocyclus, in the rat

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by F Campbell, R Atwell, Andrew FenningAndrew Fenning, A Hoey, L Brown
An extract of toxin(s) from the Australian paralysis tick, Ixodes holocyclus, produced positive inotropic responses in rat left ventricular papillary muscles and positive contractile responses in rat thoracic aortic rings. There was no measurable chronotropic response in rat right atria, but positive inotropic concentrations in papillary muscles produced arrhythmias in right atria. Positive inotropic responses were attenuated by verapamil, but unaffected by metoprolol, cimetidine, pyrilamine, tetrodotoxin and pinacidil. Microelectrode studies on isolated left ventricular papillary muscles demonstrated that the extract prolonged action potential duration at 20, 50 and 90% of repolarisation and delayed ventricular papillary muscle relaxation. Cardiovascular tissues isolated from rats with experimentally induced tick paralysis showed no myocardial damage as identified by histological and ultrastructural examination. The basal rate and force of contraction of isolated cardiac tissues were lower from tick-paralysed than normal rats. Concentration–response curves to dobutamine and calcium chloride were similar between tissues from tick-paralysed and normal rats. This is an abbreviated abstract.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

43

Start Page

743

End Page

750

Number of Pages

8

ISSN

0041-0101

Location

UK

Publisher

Pergamon

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Era Eligible

  • No

Journal

Toxicon.