Affiliation:
1. Department of Physiology and Cell Biology, University of Kansas,Lawrence 66045.
Abstract
These experiments were designed to determine if intravenous infusion of the thromboxane A2 mimetic, U-46,619, would elicit tachypnea in the rabbit, and if so whether the afferent signal was generated by receptors innervated by myelinated or unmyelinated vagal nerve fibers. Intravenous infusion of U-46,619 (0.5 microgram/kg delivered over 10 s) increased breathing frequency (26%) and right ventricular blood pressure (59%) in the anesthetized rabbit (n = 10). Systemic arterial blood pressure, heart rate, and tidal volume were unaffected by the infusion of U-46,619. When myelinated fiber conduction in the vagus nerve was eliminated by bilaterally cooling the nerve to 6 degrees C, the increase in breathing frequency was only 5% above baseline levels. The tachypneic response to U-46,619 was totally eliminated when both myelinated and unmyelinated fiber conduction was abolished by cooling the vagi to 0 degree C. The increase in right ventricular blood pressure after U-46,619 infusion was unaffected by vagal cooling. Because most (> 80%) of the tachypneic response to U-46,619 was eliminated by blockade of myelinated vagal fiber conduction, we conclude that the tachypneic response to U-46,619 is mediated mostly by receptors innervated by myelinated vagal afferent fibers in the anesthetized rabbit.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Physiology
Cited by
15 articles.
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