Abstract

The effects of right vagal nerve stimulation on changes in heart rate, mean coronary sinus blood flow, and noradrenaline overflow rate induced by right cardiac sympathetic nerve stimulation were investigated in anaesthetised decentralised, open chest dogs, when autonomic nerve fibres were stimulated tonically at a frequency of 4 or 5 Hz for 2.5 min. Sympathetic nerve stimulation produced a mean(SEM) increase in each of the variables (50(7.0)% in heart rate, 48(6.3)% in coronary sinus blood flow, and 87.0(12.3) ng.min-1 in noradrenaline overflow rate into coronary sinus blood at 30 s), and the increments remained almost constant during continued stimulation. Vagal nerve stimulation induced a decrease of 34(3.4)% in heart rate and of 22(4.5)% in coronary sinus blood flow and a slight reduction (-9(3.2) ng.min-1) in noradrenaline overflow rate at 30 s. Only the decrease in heart rate faded slightly with time. Combined stimulation of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves induced a decrease of 19(5.0)% in heart rate and 4(7.5)% in coronary sinus blood flow and an increase of 34.3(12.0) ng.min-1 in noradrenaline overflow rate at 30 s. The decrease in heart rate and coronary sinus blood flow faded, and noradrenaline overflow rate increased significantly to 86.4(17.3) ng.min-1 at 120 s. The temporal changes in heart rate, coronary sinus blood flow, and noradrenaline overflow rate caused by combined nerve stimulation were readily inhibited by treatment with atropine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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