Abstract
A surgical procedure is described for the deafferentation of carotid sinus (CS) and aortic depressor (AD) baroreceptors in 2-wk suckling rats. Baroreflex testing in unanesthetized pups showed that cardiac rate responses to acute elevations of blood pressure were reduced to less than 9% of controls after combined denervation (CSAD), 28% after AD and 47% after CS denervation at 4 h. After 24 h of nutrient deprivation, resting cardiac rates of sham operated controls fell a mean of -148 beat/min, significantly more than CS, AD, or CSAD groups (P less than 0.01). Baroreflex test responses in individuals correlated significantly with their later responses to nutrient deprivation (r = 0.67, P less than 0.01). There were no significant differences in base-line cardiac rate, systolic blood pressure, or cardiac rate during 24 h intragastric milk infusion between deafferented and control pups. These experiments suggest that arterial baroreceptors are important in the cardiovascular adjustments after nutrient deprivation in suckling rats.