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Department of Physiology, Showa University School of Medicine, Shinagawa-ku, Tokyo 142-8555, Japan
Whether brain histaminergic
neurons contribute to the regulation of tracheal tone and peripheral
vascular tone under hyperthermia was investigated in anesthetized
rabbits. Histamine release from the rostral ventrolateral medulla
(RVLM), the raphe nuclei, and the solitary nucleus of the
medulla oblongata was significantly increased by hyperthermia. The
increased histamine was significantly suppressed by 10
6 M
tetrodotoxin microdialyzed in each area. Tracheal pressure and mean
arterial pressure were significantly decreased and increased by
hyperthermia, respectively. An H1-receptor antagonist, 5 × 10
6 M (+)-chlorpheniramine, bilaterally microdialyzed in
the RVLM significantly enhanced histamine release in the RVLM as well
as significantly suppressed tracheal dilation and pressor response caused by hyperthermia. These data indicate that histamine release in
the medulla oblongata is enhanced by hyperthermia. The enhanced histamine is the neuronal origin and the cause of tracheal dilation and
pressor response at least via H1 receptors in the RVLM.
Brain histaminergic neurons play important roles in tracheal tone and peripheral vascular tone via H1 receptors in the RVLM and
homeostasis on body temperature.
H1 receptors; microdialysis; trachea; body temperature; rostral ventrolateral medulla
This article has been cited by other articles:
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H. L. Haas, O. A. Sergeeva, and O. Selbach Histamine in the Nervous System Physiol Rev, July 1, 2008; 88(3): 1183 - 1241. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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