The effects of phentolamine and propranolol on contractural responses of guinea-pig superior mesenteric-portal vein to adrenaline and isoprenaline were investigated. Phentolamine was capable of completely abolishing the response to adrenaline and to isoprenaline while propranolol had no effect on responses to either agonist. It is suggested that Alpha receptors are the only type of adrenoceptor involved in adrenergic control of contraction of this vein and that isoprenaline is capable of stimulating these receptors.
The report summarizes a one year period of investigation of death losses in West Malaysian livestock. Lesions and etiological agents are mentioned for cattle, sheep, goats, swine, poultry and companion animals as well as some miscellaneous species. Special observations related to a common paramphistome induced hepatic biliary infestation in cattle, a serious malignant head catarrh outbreak in which possible cattle to cow aerosol transmission occurred. Trismus observed in some cattle with malignant head catarrh was associated with arteriolitis and ganglioneuritis of the V cranial nerve. Parasitic, bacterial, viral toxic and neoplastic diseases are recorded in the various species. The occurrence of fatal chronic fluorosis in laboratory guinea pigs and cerebral nematodiasis in a Thoroughbred racehorse are documented.