Abstract

Previous analyses of recordings of alpha motoneuron discharges from branches of the intercostal and abdominal nerves in anesthetized cats under neuromuscular blockade demonstrated modulation with the cardiac cycle. This modulation was interpreted as evidence that thoracic somatosensory afferents, most likely muscle spindles, provide a signal to the CNS that could contribute to cardiac interoception. Here, two aspects of these observations have been extended. First, new measurements of thoracic and abdominal EMG activity in spontaneously breathing dogs show that a very similar modulation exists in these rather different circumstances. Second, further analysis of the cat recordings shows that cardiac modulation of the discharges of bulbospinal neurons that transmit the expiratory drive to thoracic motoneurons is weak and of an inappropriate time-course to be a contributor to the effect seen in the motoneurons.

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