Central neural mechanisms of the cerebral ischemic response. Characterization, effect of brainstem and cranial nerve transections, and simulation by electrical stimulation of restricted regions of medulla oblongata in rabbit.
- 1 July 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Circulation Research
- Vol. 45 (1) , 48-62
- https://doi.org/10.1161/01.res.45.1.48
Abstract
Cerebral ischemia was elicited in anesthetized rabbits by briefly clamping both common carotid arteries after previously occluding the vertebral arteries. The primary cerebral ischemic response, elicited after elimination of baroreceptors, consisted of arterial hypertension, bradycardia, and apnea. The hypertension resulted from a stereotyped and differentiated pattern of vasoconstriction in renal, mesenteric and femoral arteries. Total peripheral conductance and cardiac output were decreased. Vagotomy usually changed the bradycardia to a tachycardia unaffected by adrenalectomy. With baroreceptors intact the magnitude of the bradycardia increased and its latency decreased. The ischemic response persisted after transection of brainstem at the pontomedullary junction and/or of lower cranial nerves (except for the bradycardia which was abolished by transection of vagal rootlets). Transection of the spinal cord at C1 abolished the reflex hypertension and apnea, but not the bradycardia. Hypertension and changes of regional blood flow, comparable qualitatively and quantitatively to those elicited by ischemia, were produced by electrical stimulation of areas of the medullary reticular formation encompassing portions of the gigantocellular and parvocellular reticular nuclei. The primary cerebral ischemic response is associated with a neurally mediated and differentiated pattern of vasoconstriction and with coactivation of the cardiac vagal and sympathetic nerves. The reflex cardiac, but not vasomotor, components are secondarily modified by baroreceptor reflexes. The ischemic response results from direct stimulation of neurons in the medulla oblongata. The parvocellular and gigantocellular nuclei mediate the vasomotor but not the cardiac and respiratory components of the response.This publication has 30 references indexed in Scilit:
- Profound hypotension and abolition of the vasomotor component of the cerebral ischemic response produced by restricted lesions of medulla oblongata in rabbit. Relationship to the so-called tonic vasomotor center.Circulation Research, 1979
- Measurement of current spread from microelectrodes when stimulating within the nervous systemExperimental Brain Research, 1976
- Topography of the circulatory responses to electrical stimulation in the medulla oblongataPflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 1973
- Stereotaxic Mapping of the Monoamine Pathways in the Rat Brain*Acta Physiologica Scandinavica, 1971
- Evoked splanchnic potentials produced by electrical stimulation of medullary vasomotor regionsExperimental Brain Research, 1971
- Localization of Regions Mediating the Cushing Response in CNS of CatArchives of Neurology, 1970
- Differentiated Interaction between the Hypothalamic Defence Reaction and Baroreceptor ReflexesActa Physiologica Scandinavica, 1970
- ADRENALECTOMY IN THE RABBITImmunology & Cell Biology, 1966
- Autonomic responses to electrical stimulation of the lower brain stemJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1939
- V. On cerebral anœmia and the effects which follow ligation of the cerebral arteriesPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Containing Papers of a Biological Character, 1900