Abstract
Discussion and conclusionsIn all cases, an increase in heart rate resulted from intravenous infusion of fluid into dogs with chronic cardiac denervation, the increments ranging from 4 to 31 beats per minute. In those cases in which it was measured, right atrial pressure increased; in individual experiments, the increase in pressure was proportional to the volume infused. In the experiments with dextran, the maximal increase in right atrial pressure preceded the maximal increase in heart rate by intervals ranging from 4 to 54 minutes. Part of this wide variation was explained by the fact that the peak of the increase in rate often was approached so slowly that it was difficult to locate it precisely in relation to the time axis. In the experiments with saline, there was a clearly defined lag of 2 1/2 minutes in the example shown in Fig. 1, but in the others the small degree of cardiac acceleration made it impossible to decide if a lag was present. Similarly, a lag between the maximal increase in venous pre...
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More From: Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine. Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine (New York, N.Y.)
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