Abstract

Contribution of autonomic nervous system activity to the heart rate and blood pressure responses during chemoreceptor excitations by systemic hypoxia and hypercapnia and to hyperoxia and hypocapnia was analyzed in the urethane-anesthetized, artificially ventilated rats. Systemic hypoxia induced a co-activation of two antagonistic nerves: an increase in cardiac sympathetic and in cardiac vagal efferent nerve discharges. Increased heart rate was due to predominance of the cardiac sympathetic over the cardiac vagal activation. In spite of a marked reflex increase in the renal and cardiac sympathetic nerve activities, the local vasodilator effect of hypoxia prevented consistent changes in arterial blood pressure. Bilateral section of the carotid sinus nerves (CSN) mostly abolished autonomic nerve responses and produced a profound decreases in the blood pressure during hypoxia. Hyperoxia elicited a pressor response due to peripheral vasoconstriction with no significant change in the autonomic nerve activities except for a decrease in the cardiac sympathetic nerve discharges. Hypercapnia significantly increased blood pressure and renal nerve sympathetic activity. In contrast to hypoxia, hypercapnia excited cardiac sympathetic and inhibited cardiac vagal activity. This reciprocal effect did not elicit neurogenic cardioacceleration, because it was masked by the local inhibitory action of CO 2 on the heart rate. The increase in sympathetic activities and in blood pressure during hypercapnia persisted after bilateral CSN section indicating that the responses were mediated by central rather than by peripheral chemoreceptors. Hypocapnia produced a significant increase in cardiac vagal discharges yet a cardioacceleratory response occurred due to the local effect upon heart rate. The present results indicate that in the rat, autonomic nervous responses differ depending on the type, i.e. hypoxic or hypercapnic, chemoreceptor stimuli. Reflex heart rate and blood pressure responses do not follow the autonomic nerve activities exactly. Circulatory responses are greatly modified by local peripheral effects of hypoxic, hyperoxic, hypocapnic or CO 2 stimuli on the cardiovascular system. Species differences characterizing the autonomic nerve responsiveness to chemical stimuli in the rat are described.

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