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Evidence for central reorganization of ventilatory chemoreflex pathways in the cat during regeneration of visceral afferents in the carotid sinus nerve
Authors:S Majumdar  PG Smith  E Mills
Institution:Department of Pharmacology, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710, U.S.A.
Abstract:There are two sets of peripheral arterial chemoreceptors in the cat, the carotid bodies innervated by the carotid sinus nerve and the aortic bodies with afferents in the aortic depressor nerves. Reflex stimulation of ventilation in response to hypoxia is abolished acutely after interrupting the sensory pathway from the carotid body chemoreceptors in the cat even though the reflex pathway from the aortic body chemoreceptors is intact. However, in chronically maintained preparations, there is a restoration of the hypoxic response which is mediated by the aortic chemoreflex pathway. It was proposed that restoration was due to a ‘central reorganization’ of chemoreflex pathways which followed interruption of the sensory pathway from the carotid bodies and that the reorganization enhanced the efficacy of the aortic ventilation chemoreflex. This proposal was tested in the present experiments by measuring reflex ventilatory and cardiovascular responses to electrical stimulation of the sensory nerves containing aortic and carotid chemoreceptor afferents following bilateral interruption of carotid sinus nerves and carotid body resection. Responses measured acutely (1–6 h) after interruption were compared with those measured 60–80 and 110–140 days later. At 60–80 days, a chemoreflex response (increase in tidal volume of ventilation) to stimulation of the interrupted carotid sinus sensory pathway was markedly attenuated while the response to stimulation of the uninterrupted pathway in aortic depressor nerves was enhanced. At 110–140 days, the tidal volume response to carotid sinus nerve stimulation was greatly enhanced while the aortic depressor nerve response declined from the elevated level. There were significant but less pronounced changes in the response of other ventilatory and cardiovascular variables to aortic depressor nerve and carotid sinus nerve stimulation.The results support the idea that there is a ‘central reorganization’ of chemoreflex pathways which is reflected functionally by changes in the efficacy of reflexes evoked from aortic depressor nerve and carotid sinus nerve. The changes are analagous to those occurring in somatic reflexes during regeneration of sensory nerves. It is suggested that the changes in efficacy of carotid sinus nerve reflexes are due to a degenerative loss of synapses of the central projections of interrupted carotid sinus nerve sensory axons (degenerative atrophy) and subsequent regenerative like changes (regenerative proliferation) in the central projections. The changes in the efficacy of aortic depressor nerve reflexes may be attributed to formation of new synapses by converging central projections of this uninterrupted pathway (reactive synaptogenesis) and subsequent regression of the newly formed synapses.
Keywords:ADN  aortic depressor nerve  CSN  carotid sinus nerve  tidal volume
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