PMID: 11332507May 3, 2001Paper

Vagal afferent activity and body temperature in 3 to 10-day-old and adult rats

Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology
T Trippenbach

Abstract

This study examined the possible contribution of vagal stretch receptor activity to the increased power of the Hering-Breuer reflex in hyperthermia in rats during the early postnatal period. Experiments were performed on 10 anesthetized (pentobarbital 40 mg/kg, i.p.) 3 to 10-day-old (body weight of 16 +/- 1 g; SE) and, for comparison, 18 adult Sprague-Dawley rats (body weight of 336 +/- 35 g). Animals were tracheostomized and artificially ventilated with oxygen. The left vagus nerve was cut. In adult animals, single receptor fibers or a bundle of a few fibers were recorded using a bipolar stainless-steel electrode under mineral oil. In the young rats, a suction electrode filled with normal saline was used. Positive pressure of either 5 or 10 cmH2O was applied to the trachea when the respirator was turned off. The vagal activity was amplified and monitored on a storage oscilloscope for calculation of the frequency of vagal afferent activity during a given pressure application at different rectal temperatures (T(R); range 28 to 42 degrees C). In total, 30 and 31 sets of vagal activity in the young and adult rats, respectively, were analyzed. In all cases, an increase in tracheal pressure (P(TR)) from 5 to 10 cmH2O increased the f...Continue Reading

Citations

Jun 7, 2005·Autonomic Neuroscience : Basic & Clinical·Andrey I EmanuilovPetr M Masliukov

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