Williams R B, Richardson J S, Eichelman B S
J Behav Med. 1978 Jun;1(2):177-85. doi: 10.1007/BF00846638.
Previous research has demonstrated a fall in systolic blood pressure in the rat measured 2--5 min following shock-induced fighting. This blood pressure fall appears to depend on intact CNS catecholamine neurons. The locus coeruleus is known to supply noradrenergic neuron terminals to much of the brain. In this study, we attempted to identify the location of the CNS catecholamine neurons mediating the blood pressure response to fighting by studying the blood pressure response to shock-induced fighting in locus coeruleus-lesioned and shamlesioned rats. The locus coeruleus-lesioned animals showed a blood pressure increase after fighting on the average across 2 days of testing, while sham-lesioned animals showed a blood pressure decrease after fighting. The difference between the blood pressure responses of the two groups was highly reliable. Since both histofluorescence and biochemical studies indicated that CNS norepinephrine levels were decreased in lesioned as compared to control animals, the findings are interpreted as showing that noradrenergic neurons originating in the locus coeruleus play an important role in mediating aspects of the relationship between fighting behavior and blood pressure response.
先前的研究表明,在电击诱发打斗后2至5分钟测量的大鼠收缩压会下降。这种血压下降似乎依赖于完整的中枢神经系统儿茶酚胺神经元。已知蓝斑向大脑的大部分区域提供去甲肾上腺素能神经元终末。在本研究中,我们试图通过研究蓝斑损伤和假手术大鼠对电击诱发打斗的血压反应,来确定介导打斗血压反应的中枢神经系统儿茶酚胺神经元的位置。在平均为期2天的测试中,蓝斑损伤的动物在打斗后血压升高,而假手术动物在打斗后血压下降。两组血压反应之间的差异非常可靠。由于组织荧光和生化研究均表明,与对照动物相比,损伤动物中枢神经系统去甲肾上腺素水平降低,这些发现被解释为表明起源于蓝斑的去甲肾上腺素能神经元在介导打斗行为与血压反应之间关系的某些方面起重要作用。