Role of cardiac, pulmonary, and carotid mechanoreceptors in the control of hind-limb and renal circulation in dogs.
- 1 August 1975
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 37 (2) , 200-208
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.37.2.200
Abstract
Reflex control of hind-limb and renal resistance vessels by cardiac and pulmonary receptors was studied by interrupting afferent vagal nerve traffic when only the heart or only the lungs were in situ in anesthetized dogs with sinoaortic denervation. During normocapnia, interruption of cardiac and of pulmonary vagal traffic decreased hind-limb blood flow (constant-pressure perfusion) by 23% and 21%, respectively. Corresponding decreases in renal blood flow were 23% and 33%. Hypercapnia augmented the decreases in renal blood flow due to the vagal block. Thus, the inhibitions exerted by the heart and lung receptores on these two beds were similar during normocapnia but were greater on the renal vessels during hypercapnia. In closed-chest dogs with their aortic nerves sectioned and their carotid sinus pressure controlled, combined withdrawal of carotid and cardiopulmonary inhibition decreased hind-limb and renal blood flow by about 80% and 40%, respectively, during both normovolemia and hypervolemia. Interruption of cardiopulmonary inhibition was responsible for 17% and 31% of the decrease in hind-limb blood flow at normal and increased blood volumes, respectively; values for the decreases in renal blood flow were 50% and 65%. Thus, cardiopulmonary receptors oppose the vasoconstriction due to carotid hypotension more effectively in the kidney than they do in the hind limb.This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Circulatory Responses to Stimulation of Left Ventricular Receptors in the CatActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1973
- Extent of Engagement of Various Cardiovascular Effectors to Alterations of Carotid Sinus PressureActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1972
- Response of the renal vascular bed to acute experimental coronary arterial occlusionThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1972
- Vasoconstrictor Fibre Discharge to Skeletal Muscle, Kidney, Intestine and Skin at Varying Levels of Arterial Baroreceptor Activity in the CatActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1971
- The Role of Vagal Cardiac Nerves and Arterial Baroreceptors in the Circulatory Adjustments to Hemorrhage in the CatActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1970
- Circulatory Effects of Interruption and Stimulation of Cardiac Vagal AfferentsActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1970
- Reflex Cardiovascular Depression Produced By Stimulation Of Pulmonary Stretch Receptors In The DogJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1969
- The anatomy of the autonomic nervous system in the dogJournal of Anatomy, 1955
- Afferent impulses in the carotid sinus nerve I. The relation of the discharge from single end organs to arterial blood pressureJournal of Cellular and Comparative Physiology, 1932
- Zur Kenntnis des CarotissinusreflexesZeitschrift für Die Gesamte Experimentelle Medizin, 1926