An in vivo examination of the differences between rapid cardiovascular collapse and prolonged hypotension induced by snake venom
We investigated the cardiovascular effects of venoms from seven medically important species of snakes: Australian Eastern Brown snake ( Pseudonaja textilis ), Sri Lankan Russell’s viper ( Daboia russelii ), Javanese Russell’s viper ( D. siamensis ), Gaboon viper ( Bitis gabonica ), Uracoan rattlesna...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2019-12, Vol.9 (1), p.20231-9, Article 20231 |
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Zusammenfassung: | We investigated the cardiovascular effects of venoms from seven medically important species of snakes: Australian Eastern Brown snake (
Pseudonaja textilis
), Sri Lankan Russell’s viper (
Daboia russelii
), Javanese Russell’s viper (
D. siamensis
), Gaboon viper (
Bitis gabonica
), Uracoan rattlesnake (
Crotalus vegrandis
), Carpet viper (
Echis ocellatus
) and Puff adder (
Bitis arietans
), and identified two distinct patterns of effects: i.e. rapid cardiovascular collapse and prolonged hypotension.
P. textilis
(5 µg/kg, i.v.) and
E. ocellatus
(50 µg/kg, i.v.) venoms induced rapid (i.e. within 2 min) cardiovascular collapse in anaesthetised rats.
P. textilis
(20 mg/kg, i.m.) caused collapse within 10 min.
D. russelii
(100 µg/kg, i.v.) and
D. siamensis
(100 µg/kg, i.v.) venoms caused ‘prolonged hypotension’, characterised by a persistent decrease in blood pressure with recovery.
D. russelii
venom (50 mg/kg and 100 mg/kg, i.m.) also caused prolonged hypotension. A priming dose of
P. textilis
venom (2 µg/kg, i.v.) prevented collapse by
E. ocellatus
venom (50 µg/kg, i.v.), but had no significant effect on subsequent addition
of D. russelii
venom (1 mg/kg, i.v). Two priming doses (1 µg/kg, i.v.) of
E. ocellatus
venom prevented collapse by
E. ocellatus
venom (50 µg/kg, i.v.).
B. gabonica
,
C. vegrandis
and
B. arietans
(all at 200 µg/kg, i.v.) induced mild transient hypotension. Artificial respiration prevented
D. russelii
venom induced prolonged hypotension but not rapid cardiovascular collapse from
E. ocellatus
venom.
D. russelii
venom (0.001–1 μg/ml) caused concentration-dependent relaxation (EC
50
= 82.2 ± 15.3 ng/ml, R
max
= 91 ± 1%) in pre-contracted mesenteric arteries. In contrast,
E. ocellatus
venom (1 µg/ml) only produced a maximum relaxant effect of 27 ± 14%, suggesting that rapid cardiovascular collapse is unlikely to be due to peripheral vasodilation. The prevention of rapid cardiovascular collapse, by ‘priming’ doses of venom, supports a role for depletable endogenous mediators in this phenomenon. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41598-019-56643-0 |