Abstract

The contribution of caudal ventrolateral medulla (cVLM) to the mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR) responses elicited by microinjections of l-glutamate (GLU) into the cardiovascular responsive region of bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BST) was investigated in the chloralose-anesthetized, paralysed and artificially ventilated rat. Unilateral injections of GLU into BST elicited decreases in MAP of−25 ± 3 mmHg (n = 10) and HR of−13 ± 3 bpm (n = 10). These cardiovascular responses were not altered after a 100 nl microinjection of 0.9% NaCl into cVLM. However, the magnitudes of the decreases in MAP and HR were attenuated (−11±3 mmHg and HR,−4±1 bpm, respectively) 5 min after a 100 nl microinjection of the reversible synaptic blocker cobalt chloride (CoCl 2) into cVLM. Restimulation of BST 40 min after the 100 nl microinjection of CoCl 2 in cVLM elicited cardiovascular responses that were not significantly different in magnitude from those evoked before the microinjection of CoCl 2 (MAP,−23 ± 4mmHg; HR, − 12 ± 5bpm). In an additional series of experiments (n = 3), restimulation of BST 1 h after apsilateral electrolytic lesion in cVLM elicited decreases in MAP (−11 ± 2mmHg) and HR(−8 ± 4bpm) that were significantly smaller than those elicited prior to cVLM lesion. These data suggest that a component of the pathways originating in BST involved in mediating depressor responses and cardiac slowing relays in cVLM.

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