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Departments of 1 Anesthesiology and 2 Neuroscience and Anatomy, Penn State University College of Medicine, Hershey, Pennsylvania 17033; and 3 Department of Anesthesiology, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157
The sympathetic nervous system is essential for the cardiovascular responses to stimulation of visceral afferents. It remains unclear how the reflex-evoked sympathetic output is distributed to different vascular beds to initiate the hemodynamic changes. In the present study, we examined changes in regional sympathetic nerve activity and blood flows in anesthetized cats. Cardiovascular reflexes were induced by either electrical stimulation of the right splanchnic nerve or application of 10 µg/ml of bradykinin to the gallbladder. Blood flows were measured using colored microspheres or the Transonic flow meter system. Sympathetic efferent activity was recorded from the left splanchnic, inferior cardiac, and tibial nerves. Stimulation of visceral afferents decreased significantly blood flows in the celiac (from 49 ± 4 to 25 ± 3 ml/min) and superior mesenteric (from 35 ± 4 to 23 ± 2 ml/min) arteries, and the vascular resistance in the splanchnic bed was profoundly increased. Consistently, stimulation of visceral afferents decreased tissue blood flows in the splanchnic organs. By contrast, activation of visceral afferents increased significantly blood flows in the coronary artery and portal vein but did not alter the vascular resistance of the femoral artery. Furthermore, stimulation of visceral afferents increased significantly sympathetic efferent activity in the splanchnic (182 ± 44%) but not in the inferior cardiac and tibial nerves. Therefore, this study provides substantial new evidence that stimulation of abdominal visceral afferents differentially induces sympathetic outflow to the splanchnic vascular bed.
sympathetic efferent nerves; celiac ganglia; mesenteric blood flow; portal vein; splanchnic circulation; vascular resistance
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