%0 Journal Article %T Electrophysiological and pharmacological evaluation of the nicotinic cholinergic system in chagasic rats %A Rafael Bonfante-Cabarcas %A Erlymar L¨®pez Hincapi¨¦ %A Eliezer Jim¨¦nez Hern¨¢ndez %A Ruth Fonseca Zambrano %A Lady Ferrer Mancini %A Marcos Durand Mena %A Claudina Rodr¨ªguez-Bonfante %J BMC Pharmacology and Toxicology %D 2013 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/2050-6511-14-2 %X We evaluated nAChRs functional integrity in 54 Sprague Dawley rats, divided in two groups: healthy and chronic chagasic rats. Rats were subjected to electrocardiographic studies in the whole animal under pentobarbital anesthesia, by isolation and stimulation of vagus nerves and in isolated beating hearts (Langendorff¡¯s preparation).Nicotine, 10 ¦ÌM, induced a significant bradycardia in both groups. However, rats that had previously received reserpine did not respond to nicotine stimulation. ¦Â-adrenergic stimulation, followed by nicotine treatment, induced tachycardia in chagasic rats; while inducing bradycardia in healthy rats. Bilateral vagus nerve stimulation induced a significantly higher level of bradycardia in healthy rats, compared to chagasic rats; physostigmine potentiated the bradycardic response to vagal stimulation in both experimental groups. Electric stimulation (e.g., ¡Ý 2 Hz), in the presence of physostigmine, produced a comparable vagal response in both groups. In isolated beating-heart preparations 1 ¦ÌM nicotine induced sustained bradycardia in healthy hearts while inducing tachycardia in chagasic hearts. Higher nicotine doses (e.g.,10 ¨C 100 uM) promoted the characteristic biphasic response (i.e., bradycardia followed by tachycardia) in both groups. 10 nM DH¦ÂE antagonized the effect of 10 ¦ÌM nicotine, unmasking the cholinergic bradycardic effect in healthy rats only. 1 nM ¦Á-BGT alone induced bradycardia in healthy hearts but antagonized the 10 ¦ÌM nicotine-induced tachycardia in chagasic rats. In healthy but not in chagasic hearts, 10 ¦ÌM nicotine shortened PQ and PR interval, an effect counteracted by MA, DH¦ÂE and ¦ÁBGTOur results suggest that cholinergic function is impaired in chronic Chagas disease in rats, a phenomena that could be related to alteration on the nAChR expression.Chagas disease, caused by Trypanosome cruzi (T cruzi), is considered a serious public health problem in Central and South America countries [1]. In Venezuela, approximately 4 %K Vagal stimulation %K Isolated beating hearts %K Nicotine %K Chagas disease %K Mecamylamine %K DH¦ÂE %K ¦Á-BGT %U http://www.biomedcentral.com/2050-6511/14/2