Abstract

The thoracic cardiac nerves were stimulated in each of 21 dogs anesthetized with alpha chloralose. Recordings were made of heart rate, blood pressure, and contractile force from all four cardiac chambers. Walton-Brodie strain-gauge arches were sutured to both atria, and to three locations of each ventricle, representing both anterior and posterior surfaces. The functional autonomic components of each nerve were summarized and classified into four basic types. Types I and II were both located medial to the thoracic vagi. These were shown to contain both sympathetic and parasympathetic components traveling to all four chambers of the heart. The sympathetic componnent of the type II nerves produced reflex changes in force of contraction and systemic blood pressure. Nerves classified as types III and IV produced no parasympathetic effect on the heart. These were all located lateral to the thoracic vagi. While the type III nerves carried sympathetic efferent fibers to all four chambers, the type IV nerve carried sympathetic fibers predominantly to the right atrium.

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