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Journal ArticleDOI

Circulatory effects of interruption and stimulation of cardiac vagal afferents.

B. ÖBerg, +1 more
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 80, Iss: 3, pp 383-394
TLDR
The influence of the rhythmic activity in cardiac vagal afferents on the circulation was analyzed in chloralose-anesthetized cats by observing the cardiovascular responses to sudden interruption of this activity and to afferent stimulation of the cardiac nerves.
Abstract
The influence of the rhythmic activity in cardiac vagal afferents on the circulation was analyzed in chloralose-anesthetized cats by observing the cardiovascular responses to sudden interruption of this activity and to afferent stimulation of the cardiac nerves. The evoked responses were compared with those produced by “unloading” and stimulation of arterial baroreceptors. — Elimination of the impulse traffic in vagal afferents produced a blood pressure rise, a tachycardia and vasoconstrictions in skeletal muscle, intestine and kidney, indicating a tonic restraint of these afferents on the medullary vasomotor centre. The responses were generally moderate in the presence of normally functioning arterial baroreceptors but were pronounced after elimination of “buffering” influences from these receptors. — Comparisons of the inhibitory influences from vagal cardiac afferents and baroreceptor afferents, respectively, on the vasomotor centre indicated that the former were preferentially directed to neurons controlling the efferent discharge to the heart and the renal vessels. There was no evidence for a particularly strong engagement of the capacitance vessels in reflex patterns mediated through cardiac afferents. — Low frequency afferent stimulation of the cardiac nerves generally induced a profound brady-cardia, which was probably due to stimulation of fibres not normally tonically active.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Role of Vagal Cardiac Nerves and Arterial Baroreceptors in the Circulatory Adjustments to Hemorrhage in the Cat

TL;DR: Very rapid hemorrhages often produced a pronounced bradycardia, resembling that seen in the “vaso-vagal” syncope in man, and probably constitutes a protective mechanism, causing a break on the heart in situations of extremely poor diastolic filling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Role of heart and lung receptors with nonmedullated vagal afferents in circulatory control.

TL;DR: In dogs, removal or selective denervation of organs showed that receptors in the lungs, the atria, and the ventricles each are responsible for the vasomotor inhibition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Differential baroreflex control of heart rate and vascular resistance in rabbits. Relative role of carotid, aortic, and cardiopulmonary baroreceptors.

TL;DR: Assessment of the relative roles of aortic, carotid sinus, and vagal cardiopulmonary baroreceptors in the reflex control of heart rate and vascular resistance during changes in arterial blood pressure indicates that reflex control in heart rate may be impaired when reflex controlof hindlimb resistance is preserved.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of adrenergic outflow to peripheral blood vessels by vagal afferents from the cardiopulmonary region in the dog.

TL;DR: In this article, the aortic nerve was cut beneath the nodose ganglion, and the carotid sinuses were either denervated or vascularly isolated and maintained at a pressure of 40 mm Hg.
Journal ArticleDOI

Continuous inhibition of renin release in dogs by vagally innervated receptors in the cardiopulmonary region.

TL;DR: Vagal afferents from the cardiopulmonary region exert a tonic restraint on the release of renin; this restraint occurs in circumstances in which these Afferents cause little change in total renal blood flow.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Vagal Afferent Fibres

TL;DR: The cervical vagus consists of about 30 thousand fibres of which about 24 000 are sensory in function and about 3 thousand are myelinated and have been the centre of attraction in electrophysiological studies chiefly owing to the relative ease with which impulses can be recorded in them.
Journal ArticleDOI

A study of right and left atrial receptors.

TL;DR: It will be shown that all such receptors encountered so far arose in the right and left atria of the heart; these will be referred to as type B atrial receptors.
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