This proposal is based upon the view that information derived from receptors located in the heart, lungs, and subdiaphragmatic regions, and transmitted via the vagal nerves to the CNS, interacts with excitatory and inhibitory CNS systems that modulate the processing of noxious input. The general objectives of the present proposal are to continue the analysis of this network by both extending behavioral analyses of vagal modulation of noxious somatosensory input and providing converging electrophysiological data supporting this view. This will be accomplished by (1) establishing the relative aversive-appetitive characteristics of cervical and subdiaphragmatic vagal stimulation in behavioral tests of escape and preference, (2) characterizing the effects of electrical stimulation in primary (nucleus tractus solitarius - NTS) and secondary (nucleus reticularis ventralis pars beta - NRV pars beta) sites of termination of vagal afferents in either facilitating or inhibiting the tail-flick reflex evoked by noxious heat, (3) establishing the spinal neurochemical basis of the nociceptive effects demonstrated in these escape, preference, and tail-flick experiments by intrathecal administration of receptor antagonists, (4) more fully characterizing midbrain and medullary substrates of the vagal network by assessing the effect of selective destruction of cell bodies with ibotenic acid on the capacity of electrical stimulation of the vagus to either facilitate or inhibit the tail-flick reflex, and (5) providing converging support for the role of the vagal network in the processing of noxious input by electrophysiological recordings of responses of class 2 and class 3 lumbar spinal dorsal horn neurons to either tibial nerve stimulation (A- and C-fiber intensities) or noxious heating of the foot during either electrical stimulation or microinjections of glutamate in the NTS and NRV regions.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01NS022966-04
Application #
3405836
Study Section
Neurological Sciences Subcommittee 1 (NLS)
Project Start
1985-12-01
Project End
1993-11-30
Budget Start
1988-12-01
Budget End
1989-11-30
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
1989
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Iowa
Department
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
041294109
City
Iowa City
State
IA
Country
United States
Zip Code
52242
Thurston, C L; Randich, A (1995) Responses of on and off cells in the rostral ventral medulla to stimulation of vagal afferents and changes in mean arterial blood pressure in intact and cardiopulmonary deafferented rats. Pain 62:19-38
Thurston, C L; Randich, A (1992) Electrical stimulation of the subdiaphragmatic vagus in rats: inhibition of heat-evoked responses of spinal dorsal horn neurons and central substrates mediating inhibition of the nociceptive tail flick reflex. Pain 51:349-65
Randich, A; Gebhart, G F (1992) Vagal afferent modulation of nociception. Brain Res Brain Res Rev 17:77-99
Thurston, C L; Randich, A (1992) Effects of vagal afferent stimulation on ON and OFF cells in the rostroventral medulla: relationships to nociception and arterial blood pressure. J Neurophysiol 67:180-96
Thurston, C L; Randich, A (1991) Quantitative characterization and spinal substrates of antinociception produced by electrical stimulation of the subdiaphragmatic vagus in rats. Pain 44:201-9
Randich, A; Thurston, C L; Ludwig, P S et al. (1991) Antinociception and cardiovascular responses produced by intravenous morphine: the role of vagal afferents. Brain Res 543:256-70
Aicher, S A; Lewis, S J; Randich, A (1991) Antinociception produced by electrical stimulation of vagal afferents: independence of cervical and subdiaphragmatic branches. Brain Res 542:63-70
Thurston, C L; Randich, A (1990) Acute increases in arterial blood pressure produced by occlusion of the abdominal aorta induces antinociception: peripheral and central substrates. Brain Res 519:12-22
Randich, A; Ren, K; Gebhart, G F (1990) Electrical stimulation of cervical vagal afferents. II. Central relays for behavioral antinociception and arterial blood pressure decreases. J Neurophysiol 64:1115-24
Aicher, S A; Randich, A (1990) Antinociception and cardiovascular responses produced by electrical stimulation in the nucleus tractus solitarius, nucleus reticularis ventralis, and the caudal medulla. Pain 42:103-19

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