The effect of echothiophate on the biphasic response of rabbit ocular pressure to dipivefrin
J. S. Mindel, A. M. Koenigsberg, A. B. Kharlamb, J. Goldfarb and J. Orellana
A time-course study was performed on the intraocular pressure response of
pigmented rabbit eyes. Dipivefrin administration produced in initial
hypertensive phase lasting less than two hours followed by a prolonged
hypotensive phase. Echothiophate iodide therapy produced a more pronounced
and prolonged hypertensive response; there was no hypotensive phase.
Administration of echothiophate plus dipivefrin resulted in a hypertensive
phase similar to that from echothiophate alone; as previously reported,
this combination was not followed by a hypotensive phase. The alpha-blocker
phentolamine mesylate prevented the echothiophate-induced hypertension.
When dipivefrin was administered with echothiophate plus phentolamine,
there was an immediate hypotensive effect. It was concluded that the
hypertensive effect of echothiophate in pigmented rabbit eyes may mask the
hypotensive action of dipivefrin. This, rather than an
echothiophate-induced inhibition of esterases, may explain why combination
therapy with these drugs seemed ineffective.