Dolezel S, Gerová M, Hartmannová B, Vasků J
Department of Pathological Physiology, Purkynĕ University, Brno, Czechoslovakia.
Acta Anat (Basel). 1990;139(2):191-200.
The development of the adrenergic cardiac innervation was studied in premature dog fetuses, puppies and adult dogs by means of the formalin-induced fluorescence technique. A point-counting technique was used to evaluate the density of innervation. Two types of fluorescent profiles can be observed in the heart during development: (1) sprouting axons, and (2) beaded terminals. The axonal fluorescence disappears in adult neurons. A different morphology and a different time course of development enable to study separately the innervation of the myocardium (cardiomotor innervation) and that of the vessels (vasomotor innervation). The late prenatal innervation is very poor (0.1 hit). The first but very scant cardiomotor terminals appear in this period. A mature cardiomotor innervation is found in 4-month-old puppies [1.5 +/- 0.3 (SD) hits]. The vasomotor innervation is shifted to the right. The development of beaded vascular terminals begins and matures 1-2 weeks later. The growing fluorescent axons reveal that the myocardium is supplied by axons of the cardiac plexus and of the perivascular nerves; the vascular wall, on the other hand, is supplied by the perivascular nerves only. The developmental, spatial and morphological differences in innervation suggest that two different types of neurons exist in the sympathetic ganglia: (1) neurons innervating the vessels (coronaromotor neurons), and (2) neurons innervating the myocardium (cardiomotor neurons).