Silent myocardial infarction (MI) is critical for clinical practice with increasing risk for women and the cause remains a medical mystery. Upon the discovery of female-specific Ah-type baroreceptor neurons (BRNs), we hypothesize that glutamate mediates depressor response through afferent-specific expression of particular glutamate receptors (mGluRs) leading descending inhibition of cardiac nociception. In vivo, tail-flick reflex and electromyography were assessed to evaluate glutamate-mediated blood pressure regulation, peripheral and cardiac nociception.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent studies suggest that melatonin (Mel) plays an important role in the regulation of blood pressure (BP) via the aortic baroreflex pathway. In this study, we investigated the interaction between the baroreflex afferent pathway and Mel-mediated BP regulation in rats under physiological and hypertensive conditions. Mel (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAim: To understand the direct impact of bradykinin in autonomic control of circulation through baroreflex afferent pathway.
Methods: The mean arterial pressure (MAP) was monitored while bradykinin and its agonists were applied via nodose (NG) microinjection, the expression of bradykinin receptors (BRs) in the NG (1 -order) and nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS, 2 -order) were tested in adult male, age-matched female, and ovariectomized rats under physiological and hypertensive conditions. Additionally, bradykinin-induced depolarization was also tested in identified baroreceptor and baroreceptive neurons using whole-cell patch-clamp technique.
Female-specific subpopulation of myelinated Ah-type baroreceptor neurons (BRNs) in nodose ganglia is the neuroanatomical base of sexual-dimorphic autonomic control of blood pressure regulation, and KCa1.1 is a key player in modulating the neuroexcitation in nodose ganglia. In this study we investigated the exact mechanisms underlying KCa1.
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