In:
American Journal of Physiology-Gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology, American Physiological Society, Vol. 258, No. 2 ( 1990-02-01), p. G320-G327
Abstract:
Gastric vagal fibers on the proximal stomach that join the dorsal and ventral vagal trunks were electrically stimulated to localize and evaluate brain stem neuronal interactions in anesthetized cats. The brain stem responses were located in nucleus tractus solitarius in the dorsomedial, caudal region of the medulla oblongata. There was no significant difference in the mean latency of the gastric vagally evoked brain stem response between the dorsal and ventral vagal trunks. The responses consisted of single or multiple spikes with a mean latency of ap290 ± 50 (SD) ms. Forty-one percent, or 168 unitary responses of the 406 total responses recorded, showed convergence of proximal gastric vagal input from both the dorsal and ventral vagal trunks on the same recording site or on the same cell. Of those unitary responses that received convergent proximal gastric vagal input, 95 unitary responses (57%) showed convergence of input to the same area, on different cells at the same recording site during a single trial. Seventy-three single units (43%) received convergent input from proximal gastric vagal afferent fibers in both the dorsal and ventral trunks. Fifty-two, or 7l%, of the single unit convergent responses were excitatory in nature, whereas the remaining 29% were inhibitory. These data demonstrated that proximal gastric vagal afferent fibers that join the dorsal and ventral trunks converged on a significant number of single neurons in the brain stem. The convergent response was synaptically secure and exerted an identifiable biasing effect on the response of the brain stem neuron. These convergent interactions may play an important role in reflex mechanisms concerned with adaptive relaxation to accommodate the ingested content by the proximal stomach. gastric; proximal gastric vagal; ventral vagus; dorsal vagus; nucleus tractus solitarius; vagal brain stem interactions Submitted on March 14, 1988 Accepted on September 19, 1989
Type of Medium:
Online Resource
ISSN:
0193-1857
,
1522-1547
DOI:
10.1152/ajpgi.1990.258.2.G320
Language:
English
Publisher:
American Physiological Society
Publication Date:
1990
detail.hit.zdb_id:
1477329-6
SSG:
12