Identification of vagal sensory receptors in the rat lung: are there subtypes of slowly adapting receptors?
- 1 May 1993
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 464 (1) , 681-698
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1993.sp019657
Abstract
1. We studied the characteristics of pulmonary sensory receptors whose afferent fibres are in the left vagus nerve of opened-chest rats. The activity of these receptors was recorded during mechanical ventilation approximating eupnoea, as well as during deflation, stepwise inflations and constant-pressure inflations of the lungs. Data were also collected from closed-chest rats and analysed separately. 2. Ninety-four per cent of receptors were located in the ipsilateral lung or airways with the remainder in the contralateral lung. 3. Not only were slowly adapting receptors (SARs) the most abundant pulmonary receptors but 21% of them were either exclusively or predominantly active during the deflationary phase of the ventilatory cycle. Deflationary units were found in opened- and closed-chest rats. The average conduction velocity for all fibres innervating SARs averaged 29.7 m s-1. 4. We found rapidly adapting receptors (RARs) to be extremely rare in the rat. Their activity was sparse and irregular. The conduction velocities of fibres innervating RARs averaged 12.3 m s-1. 5. Far more abundant than RARs in the remaining population of pulmonary fibres were C fibres. They were observed to have an average conduction velocity of 2.1 m s-1, base-level activity which was irregular and a high pressure threshold of activation and were stimulated by intravenous capsaicin injection. 6. Notable differences exist between pulmonary receptors in rats and those reported in other species. The variations include the abundant existence of intrapulmonary SARs with exclusively deflationary modulation and the rarity of RARs. We also encountered C fibres which have not previously been described systematically in the rat.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Influence of lung stiffness on rapidly adapting receptors in rabbits and catsRespiration Physiology, 1987
- Adaptation of airway stretch receptors in newborn and adult dogsRespiration Physiology, 1983
- Circulatory accessibility of nervous receptors localized in the tracheobronchial treeRespiration Physiology, 1982
- Characterization of intrapulmonary, rapidly adapting receptors of guinea pigsRespiration Physiology, 1982
- Adaptation of tracheal stretch receptorsRespiration Physiology, 1981
- Histamine-Induced Bronchospasm.Allergy, 1980
- Impulse activity in afferent vagal C-fibres with endings in the intrapulmonary airways of dogsRespiration Physiology, 1977
- Properties of ‘irritant’ receptors in canine lungRespiration Physiology, 1975
- A comparative study of irritant and type J receptors in the catRespiration Physiology, 1974
- Discharge patterns of the lung stretch receptors and activation of deflation fibres in anaphylactic bronchial asthmaRespiration Physiology, 1973