INTENSE VASOCONSTRICTION AND BRADYCARDIA EVOKED BY STIMULATION OF NEURONES WITHIN THE MIDBRAIN VENTRAL TEGMENTUM OF THE RABBIT
- 28 June 1983
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology
- Vol. 10 (3) , 305-309
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1440-1681.1983.tb00202.x
Abstract
Electrical stimulation of sites in the midbrain ventral tegmental area (VTA) and the lateral hypothalamic area of the anaesthetized rabbit elicited intense vasoconstriction and profound bradycardia. The same effects were elicited by microinjections of glutamate ions into the VTA but not the lateral hypothalamic area. Following baroreceptor denervation, the bradycardic component of the response was greatly reduced, but the vasoconstrictor component was unaffected. It is concluded that the cardiovascular response is generated by excitation of a cell group within the VTA, but within the hypothalamus the response arises from excitation of axons of passage.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- A method for evoking physiological responses by stimulation of cell bodies, but not axons of passage, within localized regions of the central nervous systemJournal of Neuroscience Methods, 1982
- Role of ventrolateral medulla in vasomotor regulation: a correlative anatomical and physiological studyBrain Research, 1982
- Cardiovascular responses elicited by hypothalamic stimulation in rabbits reveal a mediolateral organizationJournal of the Autonomic Nervous System, 1981
- Electrophysiological studies of neurons in the ventral tegmental area of tsaiBrain Research, 1980
- Locomotor activity initiated by microinfusions of picrotoxin into the ventral tegmental areaBrain Research, 1979
- Potentiation of a cardioinhibitory reflex by hypothalamic stimulation in the rabbitBrain Research, 1978
- Distribution of catecholamine‐containing cell bodies in the rabbit central nervous systemJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1978
- Central integration of the autonomic cardiorespiratory response to nasopharyngeal stimulation in the rabbitBrain Research, 1975