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1 Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Pediatrics, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa 52442; and 2 Department of Pediatrics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-0718
Previous work in our laboratory has
demonstrated impairment of cardiopulmonary reflex control of renal
sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) during the newborn period. The
present study was designed to test the hypothesis that this delayed
maturation is secondary to incomplete central integration of vagal
afferent input. Term fetal (135-140 days;
n = 6), newborn (3-7 days of age;
n = 8), and young adult (6-8 wk
old; n = 8) sheep anesthetized with
-chloralose underwent vagal afferent nerve stimulation. All animals
had undergone prior sinoaortic denervation to eliminate influences from
the arterial baroreceptors. After determination of optimal stimulation parameters, RSNA responses to gradual increases in stimulation frequency (1.0-16 Hz) were recorded and compared by one-way ANOVA. RSNA decreased progressively with increased frequency of stimulation in
all three groups of animals. When comparing the three groups at any
given frequency of stimulation, reflex withdrawal of RSNA tended to be
more pronounced in newborn lambs (P < 0.05 for 1 and 4 Hz). Heart rate (HR) was also noted to
decrease significantly with vagal afferent stimulation in each of the
groups, but no significant differences in the reflex decreases in HR
were noted among the three groups of animals. These results demonstrate
that central integration of vagal afferent input is intact in fetal and
newborn sheep. These results suggest that the delayed maturation of
cardiopulmonary reflex-mediated changes in RSNA seen early in
development appears to depend on intrinsic alterations in baroreceptor function rather than incomplete central integration.
renal nerves; sheep; fetus; ontogeny
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