Dictionary Definition
adrenaline n : a catecholamine secreted by the
adrenal medulla in response to stress (trade name Adrenalin);
stimulates autonomic nerve action [syn: epinephrine, epinephrin, Adrenalin]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
the compound epinephrine
- Albanian: adrenalina
- Bosnian: adrenalin
- Catalan: adrenalina, epinefrina
- Chinese:
- Mandarin: (shènshàngxiànsù)
- Croatian: adrenalin
- Czech: adrenalin
- Finnish: adrenaliini
- French: adrénaline
- German: Adrenalin
- Greek: αδρεναλίνη
- Italian: adrenalina
- Russian: адреналин
- Serbian:
- Cyrillic: адреналин
- Roman: adrenalin
- Cyrillic: адреналин
- Slovak: adrenalín, epinefrín
- Slovene: adrenalin, epinefrin
- Spanish: adrenalina
- Swedish: adrenalin
- Turkish: adrenalin
Derived terms
Italian
Noun
adrenaline- Plural of adrenalina
Extensive Definition
Epinephrine (widely called adrenaline; see
Terminology)
is a hormone and
neurotransmitter.
It is a catecholamine, a sympathomimetic
monoamine derived from the amino acids
phenylalanine and
tyrosine. The Latin roots ad-+renes
and the Greek
roots epi-+nephros both literally mean "on/to the kidney" (referring to the
adrenal
gland, which sits atop the kidneys and secretes epinephrine).
Epinephrine is often shortened to epi or to EP in American medical
jargon.
History
In May 1886, William Bates reported the discovery of a substance produced by the adrenal gland in the New York Medical Journal. Epinephrine was isolated and identified in 1895 by Napoleon Cybulski, a Polish physiologist. The discovery was repeated in 1897 by John Jacob Abel.Jokichi
Takamine, a Japanese chemist, independently discovered the same
hormone in 1900. In 1901 he isolated and purified the hormone
adrenaline from cow glands.
It was first artificially synthesized in 1904 by
Friedrich
Stolz.
Triggers
Epinephrine is a "fight or flight" hormone, and plays a central role in the short-term stress reaction. It is released from the adrenal glands when danger threatens or in an emergency. Such triggers may be threatening, exciting, or environmental stressor conditions such as high noise levels, or bright light (see Fight-or-flight response).An example of noise-induced trigger of
epinephrine release is tinnitus. The fight-or-flight
response caused by tinnitus is a contributor to physical stress
seen in tinnitus patients, exacerbating the case.
Actions in the body
When secreted into the bloodstream, it rapidly prepares the body for action in emergency situations. The hormone boosts the supply of oxygen and glucose to the brain and muscles, while suppressing other non-emergency bodily processes (digestion in particular).It increases heart rate and
stroke
volume, dilates the pupils, and constricts arterioles in the skin and
gut while dilating arterioles in skeletal
muscles. It elevates the blood sugar
level by increasing catalysis of glycogen to glucose in the
liver, and at the same time begins the breakdown of lipids in fat cells. Like some other
stress hormones, epinephrine has a suppressive effect on the
immune
system.
Although epinephrine does not have any
psychoactive effects, stress or arousal also releases norepinephrine in the
brain. Norepinephrine has similar actions in the body, but is also
psychoactive.
The type of action in various cell types
depends on their expression of adrenergic receptors.
Adrenergic receptors
- Further reading: adrenergic receptor
Epinephrine's actions are mediated through
adrenergic receptors:
- It binds to α1 receptors of liver cells, which activate inositol-phospholipid signaling pathway, signaling the phosphorylation of glycogen synthase and glycogen phosphorylase (inactivating and activating them, respectively), leading to breakdown of glycogen (glycogenolysis) so as to release glucose to the bloodstream.
- Epinephrine also activates β-adrenergic receptors of the liver and muscle cells, thereby activating the adenylate cyclase signaling pathway, which will in turn increase glycogenolysis.
β2 receptors are found primarily in skeletal
muscle blood vessels where they trigger vasodilation. However,
α-adrenergic receptors are found in most smooth
muscles and splanchnic
vessels, and epinephrine triggers vasoconstriction in
those vessels.
Therapeutic use
Epinephrine is used as a drug to treat cardiac arrest and other cardiac dysrhythmias resulting in diminished or absent cardiac output; its action is to increase peripheral resistance via α1-adrenoceptor vasoconstriction, so that blood is shunted to the body's core, and the β1-adrenoceptor response which is increased cardiac rate and output (the speed and pronouncement of heart beats). This beneficial action comes with a significant negative consequence—increased cardiac irritability—which may lead to additional complications immediately following an otherwise successful resuscitation. Alternatives to this treatment include vasopressin, a powerful antidiuretic which also increases peripheral vascular resistance leading to blood shunting via vasoconstriction, but without the attendant increase in myocardial irritability.Because of various expression of α1 or
β2-receptors, depending on the patient, administration of
epinephrine may raise or lower blood pressure, depending whether or
not the net increase or decrease in peripheral resistance can
balance the positive inotropic and chronotropic effects of
epinephrine on the heart, effects which respectively increase the
contractility and
rate
of the heart.
Biosynthesis
Epinephrine is synthesized from norepinephrine in a
synthetic pathway shared by all catecholamines, including L-dopa, dopamine, norepinephrine, and
epinephrine.
Epinephrine is synthesized via methylation of the
primary distal amine of norepinephrine by
phenylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (PNMT) in the cytosol of adrenergic
neurons and cells of the adrenal
medulla (so-called chromaffin
cells). PNMT is only found in the cytosol of cells of adrenal
medullary cells. PNMT uses S-adenosylmethionine
(SAMe) as a cofactor to donate the methyl group to norepinephrine,
creating epinephrine.
For norepinephrine to be acted upon by PNMT in
the cytosol, it must first be shipped out of granules
of the chromaffin cells. This may occur via the catecholamine-H+
exchanger VMAT1. VMAT1 is also
responsible for transporting newly synthesized epinephrine from the
cytosol back into chromaffin granules in preparation for
release.
Regulation
Epinephrine synthesis is solely under the control of the central nervous system (CNS). Several levels of regulation dominate epinephrine synthesis.Adrenocorticotropic
hormone (ACTH) and the sympathetic
nervous system stimulate the synthesis of epinephrine
precursors by enhancing the activity of enzymes involved in
catecholamine synthesis. The specific enzymes are tyrosine
hydroxylase in the synthesis of dopa and enzyme
dopamine-β-hydroxylase
in the synthesis of norepinephrine.
ACTH also stimulates the adrenal
cortex to release cortisol, which increases the
expression of PNMT in chromaffin cells, enhancing epinephrine
synthesis. This is most often done in response to stress.
The sympathetic nervous system, acting via
splanchnic
nerves to the adrenal medulla, stimulates the release of
epinephrine. Acetylcholine
released by preganglionic sympathetic fibers of these nerves acts
on
nicotinic acetylcholine receptors, causing cell depolarization
and an influx of calcium
through
voltage-gated calcium channels. Calcium triggers the exocytosis
of chromaffin granules and thus the release of epinephrine (and
norepinephrine) into the bloodstream.
Epinephrine (as with norepinephrine) does exert
negative
feedback to down-regulate
its own synthesis at the presynaptic alpha-2 adrenergic
receptor.
A pheochromocytoma is a
tumor of the adrenal gland (or, rarely, the ganglia of the sympathetic
nervous system), which results in the uncontrolled secretion of
catecholamines, usually epinephrine.
In liver cells, epinephrine binds to the
β-Adrenergic receptor which changes conformation and helps Gs, a G
protein, exchange GDP to GTP. This trimeric G protein dissociates
to Gs alpha and Gs beta/gamma subunits. Gs alpha binds to adenyl
cyclase thus converting ATP into Cyclic AMP. Cyclic AMP binds to
the regulatory subunit of Protein Kinase A: Protein kinase A
phosphorylates Phosphorylase Kinase. Meanwhile, Gs beta/gamma binds
to the calcium channel and allows calcium ions to enter the
cytoplasm. Calcium ions bind to calmodulin proteins, a protein
present in all eukaryotic cells, which then binds to Phosphorylase
Kinase and finishes its activation. Phosphorylase Kinase
phosphorylates Phosphorylase which then phosphorylates glycogen and
converts it to glucose-6-phosphate.
Terminology
Although widely referred to as adrenaline outside of the US, and the lay public worldwide, the USAN and INN for this chemical is epinephrine because adrenaline bore too much similarity to the Parke, Davis & Co trademark Adrenalin (without the "e") which was registered in the U.S. The BAN and EP term for this chemical is adrenaline, and is indeed now one of the few differences between the INN and BAN systems of names.Amongst U.S. health professionals, the term
epinephrine is used over adrenaline. However, it should be noted
that universally, pharmaceuticals that mimic the effects of
epinephrine are called adrenergics, and receptors for epinephrine
are called adrenoceptors.
It can also be spelled epinephrin (without the
"e").
Isomers
Natural epinephrine is the (R)-(−)-L-epinephrine
stereoisomer.
Autoinjectors
Epinephrine is now also used in EpiPens and Twinjects. EpiPens are long narrow autoinjectors that administer epinephrine, Twinjects are similar but contain two doses of epinephrine. It is also used in medicines and usually the Epinephrine is extracted from adrenal glands of hogs, cattle, and sheep.Though both EpiPen and Twinject are trademark
names, common usage of the terms are drifting toward the generic
context of any epinephrine autoinjector.
Pharmaceutical Preparations
Aqueous preparations of adrenaline are obtained by
use of HCL or
tartaric
acid we should use only acids because in the absence of acid
medium , it undergoes oxidation.
Borate salt is used in opthalmolgy
See also
References
Notes
General references
- Medical Physiology: A Cellular And Molecular Approach
- Biochemistry, 3rd ed
adrenaline in Arabic: أدرينالين
adrenaline in Azerbaijani: Adrenalin
adrenaline in Bulgarian: Адреналин
adrenaline in Catalan: Adrenalina
adrenaline in Czech: Adrenalin
adrenaline in Danish: Adrenalin
adrenaline in German: Adrenalin
adrenaline in Dhivehi: އެޑްރެނަލިން
adrenaline in Estonian: Adrenaliin
adrenaline in Modern Greek (1453-):
Επινεφρίνη
adrenaline in Spanish: Adrenalina
adrenaline in Esperanto: Adrenalino
adrenaline in French: Adrénaline
adrenaline in Galician: Adrenalina
adrenaline in Croatian: Adrenalin
adrenaline in Ido: Adrenalino
adrenaline in Italian: Adrenalina
adrenaline in Hebrew: אדרנלין
adrenaline in Latin: Adrenalinum
adrenaline in Lithuanian: Adrenalinas
adrenaline in Hungarian: Adrenalin
adrenaline in Macedonian: Адреналин
adrenaline in Dutch: Adrenaline
adrenaline in Japanese: アドレナリン
adrenaline in Norwegian: Adrenalin
adrenaline in Polish: Adrenalina
adrenaline in Portuguese: Adrenalina
adrenaline in Romanian: Adrenalină
adrenaline in Russian: Адреналин
adrenaline in Albanian: Adrenalina
adrenaline in Simple English: Epinephrine
adrenaline in Slovak: Epinefrín
adrenaline in Slovenian: Adrenalin
adrenaline in Serbian: Адреналин
adrenaline in Finnish: Adrenaliini
adrenaline in Swedish: Adrenalin
adrenaline in Vietnamese: Adrenaline
adrenaline in Turkish: Adrenalin
adrenaline in Ukrainian: Адреналін
adrenaline in Chinese: 肾上腺素