Abstract

Experiments were performed in 25 urethane-anaesthetized male Sprague–Dawley rats. Forty-six RVLM neurons were identified as putative presympathetic neurons according to their arterial baroreceptor reflex related properties, i.e. they were inhibited by stimulation of the aortic nerve; silenced by elevation of blood pressure and had a cardiac cycle related rhythm of spontaneous discharge. Responses of these neurons to tripled square wave stimulation of vagal afferents was tested by means of peristimulus time histograms. In addition to a long-lasting inhibition (I 2), some neurons had one (P o) or two excitatory peaks (P 1 and P 2), and there was a short-lasting inhibition (I 1) between P 1 and P 2. After microinjection of CPP (0.1 μl, 50 mM) into the NTS, the inhibitory responses were blocked, but the excitatory peaks were not affected; in the CVLM, CPP microinjection of the same dose had a similar effect on the responses elicited by vagal afferent stimulation in 15 of the 24 neurons tested. No detectable effects were observed in 9 neurons. However, intravenously administered ketamine attenuated or abolished these responses, either inhibitory or excitatory, in a dose dependent way. These results suggest: (1) an NMDA mechanism is involved in both the inhibitory and the excitatory responses. For the inhibitory responses, the involvement is both in the NTS and in the CVLM; for the excitatory responses, it is probably in the RVLM. (2) There may be a direct excitatory amino acid (EAA) pathway from the NTS to the RVLM.

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