Barraco R A, el-Ridi M R
Department of Physiology, Wayne State University, School of Medicine, Detroit, MI 48201.
Brain Res Bull. 1989 Oct-Nov;23(4-5):299-310. doi: 10.1016/0361-9230(89)90213-x.
A limited occipital craniotomy was conducted on urethane-anesthetized rats to expose the caudal medulla in the region of the obex. Discrete bipolar electrical stimulation was administered at sites in the dorsal medulla of spontaneously breathing rats in the vicinity of the caudal nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) and adjacent reticular formation. Cardiorespiratory responses were recorded during microstimulation at three separate stimulating frequencies to examine the functional interaction of cardiovascular and respiratory-related neuronal elements in the NTS. Microstimulation was conducted at sites in the dorsal and medial regions of the NTS beginning at the level of the area postrema and extending posteriorly through the rostrocaudal course of the NTS; microstimulation was also conducted at midline sites in the commissural region of the NTS and the ventral and ventrolateral regions of the caudal NTS. Microstimulation of loci in the reticular formation adjacent to these NTS sites did not elicit any cardiorespiratory responses whereas stimulation of individual NTS regions elicited specific patterns of cardiorespiratory responses. Specifically, microstimulation of the dorsal and medial NTS at the level of the area postrema elicited pressor responses associated with apneic/hypopneic responses whereas stimulation of midline sites in the commissural region, dorsomedial sites caudal to the area postrema and the ventral and ventrolateral areas of the caudal regions of the NTS elicited depressor responses associated with bradycardic and apneic/hypopneic responses. The most profound respiratory effects (i.e., apnea) and heart rate responses (i.e., bradycardia) were seen following stimulation of the ventral and ventrolateral regions of the caudal NTS. These findings support the notion that the caudal NTS is a major site for coordinating cardiorespiratory afferent information in the rat and it is also apparent from this study that specific regions of the caudal NTS demonstrate a functional coexistence of cardiovascular and respiratory-related neurons. Finally, the results from this study showing the regional specificity and frequency-dependent characteristics of cardiorespiratory response patterns elicited by microstimulation suggest that the local microcircuitry and intrinsic neuronal networks in the more caudal regions of the rat NTS are more complex and heterogeneous than hitherto revealed.
在经氨基甲酸乙酯麻醉的大鼠上进行有限的枕骨开颅手术,以暴露闩部区域的延髓尾部。对自主呼吸的大鼠延髓背侧靠近孤束核(NTS)尾部及相邻网状结构的部位进行离散双极电刺激。在三种不同的刺激频率下进行微刺激时记录心肺反应,以研究NTS中心血管和呼吸相关神经元成分的功能相互作用。微刺激在NTS背侧和内侧区域的部位进行,从最后区水平开始,向后延伸穿过NTS的头尾行程;微刺激也在NTS连合区域的中线部位以及尾侧NTS的腹侧和腹外侧区域进行。对这些NTS部位相邻的网状结构位点进行微刺激未引发任何心肺反应,而对NTS各个区域的刺激则引发了特定模式的心肺反应。具体而言,在最后区水平对NTS背侧和内侧进行微刺激会引发与呼吸暂停/呼吸浅慢反应相关的升压反应,而对连合区域的中线位点、最后区尾侧的背内侧位点以及NTS尾侧区域的腹侧和腹外侧区域进行刺激则引发与心动过缓和呼吸暂停/呼吸浅慢反应相关的降压反应。在刺激尾侧NTS的腹侧和腹外侧区域后观察到最显著的呼吸效应(即呼吸暂停)和心率反应(即心动过缓)。这些发现支持了尾侧NTS是大鼠协调心肺传入信息的主要部位这一观点,并且从这项研究中也可以明显看出,尾侧NTS的特定区域表现出心血管和呼吸相关神经元的功能共存。最后,这项研究的结果表明微刺激引发的心肺反应模式具有区域特异性和频率依赖性特征,这表明大鼠NTS更尾侧区域的局部微电路和内在神经元网络比迄今所揭示的更为复杂和异质。