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The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Vol 60, Issue 6 815-819, Copyright © 1978 by Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, Inc


JOURNAL CONTENTS

Arterial hypertension induced by femoral lengthening. A canine model

R Whitehill and MW Hakala

In a canine experimental model, femora were lengthened 2.5 to 3.0 centimeters over a one-minute period. Systolic blood-pressure elevation averaged forty millimeters of mercury and diastolic blood-pressure elevation, twenty-two millimeters of mercury. The average peak arterial pressure was 193/115 millimeters of mercury. The effects of sympatholytic agents on the experimental model were tested. Alpha-adrenergic blockade by phenoxybenzamine, total-body catecholamine depletion by reserpine, and sympathetic ganglionic blockade by trimethaphan camphorsulfonate all inhibited the rise in arterial pressure, but beta-adrenergic blockade by propranolol did not. A differential spinal anesthetic with Xylocaine solution dramatically decreased the elevation in arterial pressure.
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