scholarly journals Reflex Inhibition of Sympathetic Vasoconstrictor Activity at a Peripheral Locus

1966 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 714-728 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerard Lincoln Gebber ◽  
Lloyd Beck
1971 ◽  
Vol 49 (7) ◽  
pp. 688-698
Author(s):  
A. A. Pollard ◽  
L. Beck

An analysis has been made of the various factors which contribute to the vasodilatation observed in the innervated perfused hindlimb when catecholamines are injected intravenously. Bilateral transection of the lumbar sympathetic chains abolishes all dilatation in some animals and greatly reduces dilatations in all animals. When the sympathetic tone lost by chain transection is restored by preganglionic stimulation, the residual hindlimb dilatation still present after chain section is often increased, and a component of dilatation appears de novo in the hindlimb of many animals. This dilatation was blocked by spinal anesthesia. It is concluded that: (1) the peripheral dilatation produced in the hindlimb of the dog by intravenously administered catecholamines is almost entirely reflex in origin; (2) blockade of ganglionic transmission by intravenously injected adrenergic amines does not contribute significantly to the production of reflex dilatation; (3) the residual dilatation remaining after transection of the sympathetic chains is also reflex in origin because it is blocked by spinal anesthesia; (4) the hindlimb vasodilatation which appears de novo during stimulation of the sympathetic chain is also abolished by spinal anesthesia and is apparently due to inhibition of adrenergic discharge at a peripheral locus; (5) in the pentobarbital anesthetized dog, little, if any, of the hindlimb dilatation resulting from the intravenous injection of epinephrine is due to predominant activation of beta receptors.


2017 ◽  
Vol 595 (13) ◽  
pp. 4493-4506 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian C. Horslen ◽  
J. Timothy Inglis ◽  
Jean-Sébastien Blouin ◽  
Mark G. Carpenter

1978 ◽  
Vol 85 (1-6) ◽  
pp. 336-341 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. R. Marsh ◽  
H. S. Hoffman ◽  
C. L. Stitt
Keyword(s):  

2007 ◽  
Vol 98 (3) ◽  
pp. 1102-1107 ◽  
Author(s):  
Serajul I. Khan ◽  
John A. Burne

Muscle cramp was induced in one head of the gastrocnemius muscle (GA) in eight of thirteen subjects using maximum voluntary contraction when the muscle was in the shortened position. Cramp in GA was painful, involuntary, and localized. Induction of cramp was indicated by the presence of electromyographic (EMG) activity in one head of GA while the other head remained silent. In all cramping subjects, reflex inhibition of cramp electrical activity was observed following Achilles tendon electrical stimulation and they all reported subjective relief of cramp. Thus muscle cramp can be inhibited by stimulation of tendon afferents in the cramped muscle. When the inhibition of cramp-generated EMG and voluntary EMG was compared at similar mean EMG levels, the area and timing of the two phases of inhibition (I1, I2) did not differ significantly. This strongly suggests that the same reflex pathway was the source of the inhibition in both cases. Thus the cramp-generated EMG is also likely to be driven by spinal synaptic input to the motorneurons. We have found that the muscle conditions that appear necessary to facilitate cramp, a near to maximal contraction of the shortened muscle, are also the conditions that render the inhibition generated by tendon afferents ineffective. When the strength of tendon inhibition in cramping subjects was compared with that in subjects that failed to cramp, it was found to be significantly weaker under the same experimental conditions. It is likely that reduced inhibitory feedback from tendon afferents has an important role in generating cramp.


1965 ◽  
Vol 43 (2) ◽  
pp. 229-246
Author(s):  
DONALD KENNEDY ◽  
KIMIHISA TAKEDA

1. Fibres from the tonic, superficial abdominal flexor muscles in the crayfish receive a complex, highly polyneuronal innervation from among five motor axons and one inhibitor. All efferent nerve fibres show some degree of ‘spontaneous’ activity. 2. The muscle fibres therefore exhibit a constant flux of membrane potential, and hence of tension, in intact preparations. Depolarization is the result of facilitation and/or summation of junctional potentials of various amplitudes, and in some fibres of superimposed electrogenic responses. Neighbouring fibres tend to show similar innervation patterns, more distant ones dissimilar ones. 3. No useful distinction may be made between ‘fast’ and ‘slow’ motor axons. A given axon may produce junctional potentials of very different amplitudes (and some what different rise-times) in neighbouring muscle fibres while another exhibits a precisely reciprocal relationship. The largest axon produces facilitating junctional potentials in all the muscle fibres it innervates, but others may exhibit facilitation in one muscle fibre and antifacilitation in another. 4. Most muscle fibres are innervated by two or three excitatory axons; fibres with single, quadruple or quintuple motor innervation are relatively rare. There is a pronounced tendency for fibres with a rich excitatory innervation to receive the inhibitor as well. The innervation is not shared equally among motor axons: one serves over 90% of the muscle fibres, and two others 20% or less. Statistical analysis of the combinations of motor axons serving muscle fibres reveals that these are apparently random, with all variations from randomness accountable on the grounds of broad regional differences in distribution. 5. The motor axons are selectively activated by specific reflex inputs. Since muscle fibres receive, on the average, only a restricted sample of the available motor supply, it follows that they participate differentially in different reflex actions. Evidence is presented that the firing pattern of motor nerves is appropriate for the temporal properties of their neuromuscular junctions. 6. Reflex inhibition is accomplished by central inhibition of all excitatory motor outflow, accompanied by reciprocal firing in the inhibitor axon. This and the fact that less than half the muscle fibres receive inhibitory innervation demonstrate that, in contrast to the one other crustacean system analysed, reflex inhibition is primarily a central event. Peripheral inhibition in the slow flexor system must serve mainly as a device to achieve repolarization and thus terminate contractions. Such action necessarily depends upon post-synaptic rather than presynaptic mechanisms.


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