Cardiopulmonary reflexes and arterial pressure during rest and exercise in dogs
- 1 March 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physiological Society in American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology
- Vol. 244 (3) , H362-H369
- https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.1983.244.3.h362
Abstract
Mean arterial blood pressure, heart rate and cardiac output were monitored at rest and during exercise of 2 grades of severity in conscious dogs under control conditions and after progressive interruption of the baroreflexes. Aortic arch denervation and vascular isolation and pressurization of the carotid sinuses were used to interrupt arterial baroreflexes. Subsequent interruption of cardiopulmonary afferents was produced by acute bilateral cervical vagotomy. Apparently, with the cardiopulmonary receptors alone operative, the arterial blood pressure response to exercise is abnormal, cardiopulmonary receptors do not contribute to the moment-to-moment modulation of arterial pressure, and the carotid sinuses, aortic arch and cardiopulmonary receptors are all involved in determining the mean level of arterial blood pressure. Vagally innervated cardiopulmonary receptors do not have a significant role in regulating arterial blood pressure during exercise but are involved in establishing the general level of arterial blood pressure.This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Preferential distribution of inhibitory cardiac receptors with vagal afferents to the inferoposterior wall of the left ventricle activated during coronary occlusion in the dog.Circulation Research, 1978
- Chronic labile hypertension produced by lesions of the nucleus tractus solitarii in the cat.Circulation Research, 1977