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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0242706 (
hyperoxia
)
5,219
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. It has been widely accepted that the rat aortic depressor nerve contains only baroreceptors. However, the experiments which have provided these negative data have employed whole aortic nerve recording. In the present study, the technical difficulties associated with recording single fibres in vivo, from the rat aortic nerve (diameter 25-50 microm), have been surmounted using a small tip, glass suction electrode technique. 2. Upon switching from normocapnic
hyperoxia
to hypercapnic hypoxia, irregularly firing units (n = 13) appeared and these were significantly excited by intravenous injections of sodium cyanide (20 microg) but not by rises in arterial blood pressure induced by methoxamine (an alpha1-adrenoreceptor agonist; 10 microg). Inhalation of 100 % oxygen rapidly and reversibly silenced, or profoundly reduced, ongoing activity. 3. Intravenous injection of phenylbiguanide (
PBG
; a 5-HT3 receptor agonist; 8 microg) strongly stimulated the chemoreceptors and was followed by a period of chemodepression (3-21 s). In contrast none of the single fibre baroreceptors recorded (n = 15) were excited by
PBG
but all significantly increased their discharge in response to the increases in arterial blood pressure associated with methoxamine and cyanide. Both the excitatory and inhibitory effects of
PBG
on the chemoreceptor fibres were abolished by ondansetron (a 5-HT3 receptor antagonist: 1 mg kg-1 i.v.; n = 5 animals) whilst the chemoexcitatory action of cyanide was preserved. 4. It is concluded that there are chemoreceptor afferents contained in the aortic nerve of the Sprague-Dawley rat. The 5-HT3 receptor appears not to be a pre-requisite for aortic body chemoexcitation.
...
PMID:Activity of aortic chemoreceptors in the anaesthetized rat. 988 53