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International Journal of Immunopharmacology | 1992

Effect of immunosuppressive agents on the guanethidine-induced sympathectomy in athymic and euthymic rats

Hans Petter Hougen; Peter Thygesen; Henning Bjørn Christensen; Jørgen Rygaard; Ove Svendsen; Per Juul

Guanethidine sulphate causes destruction of peripheral sympathetic neurons and infiltration of mononuclear inflammatory cells in the sympathetic ganglia of both athymic nude (rnu/rnu) and euthymic LEW/Mol rats. The effect of guanethidine is believed to be an autoimmune reaction. To determine the effect of immunosuppressive drugs concurrently with guanethidine treatment both athymic and euthymic rats were treated with guanethidine 40 mg/kg i.p. daily for 14 days, cyclophosphamide 100 mg/kg i.p. on days 1 and 8, methylprednisolone 10 mg/kg and cyclosporin A 10 mg/kg daily from days 1 to 7, and then every other day from days 8 to 14. The number of neurons in the sympathetic ganglia was counted and four subpopulations of mononuclear inflammatory cells were identified by monoclonal antibodies MHC II, CD8 T-cells/NK-cells, CD5 T-cells, CD4 T-cells/macrophages. Our results show that the immunosuppressive drugs used were unable to prevent the guanethidine-induced reduction of sympathetic neurons, although the number, of neurons following guanethidine-methylprednisolone treatment was significantly higher compared with guanethidine alone in both athymic and euthymic rats. The identification of mononuclear cells in the sympathetic ganglia showed that the CD8/NK and CD5 populations were the populations primarily responding to guanethidine treatment. Both CD8/NK and CD5 populations were absent without guanethidine, but increased significantly following guanethidine in both athymic and euthymic animals. None of the immunosuppressive drugs used could prevent the guanethidine-induced rise in the CD8/NK population in neither athymic nor in euthymic rats. The rise in the CD5 population was suppressed following treatment with all immunosuppressive drugs in athymic rats, but only following methylprednisolone in euthymic animals. These results indicate that guanethidine induces proliferation of T-cells in euthymic rats and non-functional CD5 positive pre T-cells in athymic animals. The CD5 population in both athymic and euthymic animals appears relatively more sensitive to immunosuppressive drugs than the NK-cell population also activated by guanethidine. This relatively resistant NK-cell population seems to play an important role in the guanethidine-induced destruction of sympathetic neurons and can explain why the guanethidine-induced immunological reaction could not be fully prevented by the immunosuppressive drugs used. The conclusion is that guanethidine induces destruction of sympathetic neurons by a NK-cell-mediated reaction.


Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2009

Ultrastructural changes in the rat superior cervical ganglion following prolonged guanethidine administration.

Jens Jensen-Holm; Per Juul


Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2009

The Effects of Guanethidine, Pre- and Postganglionic Nerve Division on the Rat Superior Cervical Ganglion: Cholinesterases and Catecholamines (Histochemistry), and Histology

Jens Jensen-Holm; Per Juul


Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2009

Determination of guanethidine in sympathetic ganglia.

Per Juul; Ole Sand


Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2009

Effects of various antihypertensive guanidine derivatives on the adult rat superior cervical ganglion: histology, ultrastructure, and cholinesterase histochemistry.

Per Juul


Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2009

The Effects of Guanethidine, Pre‐ and Postganglionic Nerve Division on the Rat Superior Cervical Ganglion: Cholinesterases and Protein

Jens Jensen-Holm; Per Juul


Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2009

The Effect of Guanethidine on the Noradrenaline Content of the Adult Rat Superior Cervical Ganglion

Per Juul; Richard L. McIsaac


Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2009

The Effect of Guanethidine Pretreatment on Transmission in the Superior Cervical Ganglion

Oliver A. Downing; Per Juul


Pharmacology & Toxicology | 1989

Guanethidine‐Induced Sympathectomy in the Nude Rat

Anders Juul; Per Juul; Henning Bjørn Christensen


Pharmacology & Toxicology | 2009

Accumulation of Guanethidine by Sympathetic Ganglia of Reserpinized Rats

Per Juul

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Anders Juul

University of Copenhagen

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Jens Schou

University of Copenhagen

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Ole Sand

University of Copenhagen

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