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Vol. 83, Issue 5, 1448-1453, 1997
Laboratory of Behavioral Sciences, Gerontology Research Center, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Baltimore, Maryland 21224
Received 24 February 1997; accepted in final form 18 June 1997.
Chefer, Svetlana I., Mark I. Talan, and Bernard T. Engel.
Central neural correlates of learned heart rate control during exercise: central command demystified. J. Appl.
Physiol. 83(5): 1448-1453, 1997.
To identify the
brain areas involved in central command, four monkeys were trained to
attenuate the tachycardia of exercise while different brain sites
affecting heart rate (HR) were simultaneously stimulated electrically.
Among 24 brain sites located mostly in the limbic structures, we have
identified four types of control systems that mediate cardiovascular
and motor behavior during exercise. One system increases HR
equivalently during both exercise and operantly controlled HR, whereas
another increases HR during both tasks and abolishes operant HR
control. In the third system, the effect of brain stimulation on HR is attenuated during exercise and during exercise with operantly controlled HR. The fourth system increases HR in both tasks, but its
effect is significantly attenuated during operant HR control. We
believe that this last system, which includes the mediodorsal nucleus,
nucleus ventralis anterior, and cingulate cortex, plays a significant
role in central command.
monkeys; nonhuman primates; central nervous system; operant conditioning; tachycardia of exercise
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