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Dipartimento di Medicina Interna, Cattedra di Fisiopatologia Medica, Università di Roma "Tor Vergata," Rome 00173, Italy
Received 28 December 1995; accepted in final form 19 July 1996.
Raimondi, G., J. M. Legramante, F. Iellamo, G. Frisardi, S. Cassarino, and G. Peruzzi. Noxious stimuli do not determine reflex
cardiorespiratory effects in anesthetized rabbits. J. Appl. Physiol. 81(6): 2421-2427, 1996.
The
main purpose of this study is to examine whether the stimulation of an
exclusively pain-sensing receptive field (dental pulp) could determine
cardiorespiratory effects in animals in which the cortical integration
of the peripheral information is abolished by deep anesthesia. In 15 anesthetized (
-chloralose and urethan) rabbits, low (3-Hz)- and
high-frequency (100-Hz) electrical dental pulp stimulation was
performed. Because this stimulation caused dynamic and static reflex
contractions of the digastric muscles leading to jaw opening
[jaw-opening reflex (JOR); an indirect sign of algoceptive fiber
activation], experimentally induced direct dynamic and static
contractions of the digastric muscle were also performed. The low- and
high-frequency stimulation of the dental pulp determined cardiovascular
[systolic arterial pressure (SAP):
21.7 ± 4.6 and 10.8 ± 4.7 mmHg, respectively] and
respiratory [pulmonary ventilation
(
E): 145.1 ± 44.9 and 109.3 ± 28.4 ml /min, respectively] reflex
responses similar to those observed during experimentally induced
dynamic (SAP:
17.5 ± 4.2 mmHg;
E: 228.0 ± 58.5 ml /min) and static (SAP: 5.8 ± 1.5 mmHg;
E: 148.0 ± 75.3 ml /min) muscular contractions. The elimination of
digastric muscular contraction (JOR) obtained by muscular paralysis did
away with the cardiovascular changes induced by dental pulp
stimulation, the effectiveness of which in stimulating dental pulp
receptors has been shown by recording trigeminal-evoked potentials in
six additional rabbits. The main conclusion was that, in
deeply anesthetized animals, an algesic stimulus is unable to determine
cardiorespiratory effects, which appear to be exclusively linked to the
stimulation of ergoreceptors induced by muscular contraction.
pseudoaffective reflexes; cardiorespiratory reflexes; nociception; muscular reflex drive
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