Dogs which survived a bilateral cervical vagosympathectomy showed a striking reduction in catecholamine concentration of right atrial tissue. Significant decreases in catecholamine concentration were noted also in the tissues of both ventricles and the interventricular septum. Unilateral cervical vagosympathectomy, either right or left, was not followed by a statistically significant decrease in the concentration of cardiac catecholamines. The cause of the depletion after bilateral cervical vagosympathectomy is not clear. It may be due to destruction of intracardiac adrenergic nerves or a relatively increased utilization of catecholamines, which exceeds the capacity of the cardiac tissues to synthesize, take up, or bind these substances.
Am J Physiol 209: 951-954, 1965;