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Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol 74, Issue 1 103-110, Copyright © 1993 by American Physiological Society
ARTICLES |
J. G. Pickar, J. M. Hill and M. P. Kaufman
Department of Internal Medicine, University of California, Davis 95616.
Using electrical stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region, we made decerebrate unanesthetized cats walk on a treadmill. The locomotion induced by stimulation of this midbrain area was assessed before and during activation of vagal afferents by either intravenous injection of phenylbiguanide or inflation of a balloon placed in the left atrium. Inflation of a balloon, which increased left atrial pressure by 7-25 mmHg, abolished locomotion in 9 of 10 cats tested. Bilateral cervical vagotomy prevented the abolition of locomotion by balloon inflation in each of two cats tested. Intravenous phenylbiguanide (50 or 100 micrograms/kg) or serotonin (40 micrograms/kg) injections abolished or attenuated walking induced by midbrain stimulation in 11 of 13 cats tested. In addition, intravenous phenylbiguanide injections abolished or attenuated locomotion with a shorter onset time than did systemic injections of this substance in five of six cats tested. Bilateral cervical vagotomy prevented the abolition of locomotion by phenylbiguanide injection in each of five cats tested. We conclude that locomotion can be prevented by a viscerosomatic reflex arising from the lungs and heart. The afferent arm of this reflex arc is the vagus nerve. Afferents such as slowly and rapidly adapting pulmonary stretch receptors, atrial receptors, and lung C-fibers may have had a role in preventing locomotion during the increase in left atrial pressure in our experiments. On the other hand, pulmonary C-fibers had a crucial role in preventing locomotion during intravenous injection of phenyl-biguanide. We speculate that this viscerosomatic reflex may help to explain in part the intolerance for exercise displayed by patients with congestive heart failure.
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