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First published online on August 2, 2002.
Copyright © 2002 by The Physiological Society
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Received April 11, 2002
Accepted after revision June 10, 2002

Activation of different vestibular subnuclei evokes differential respiratory and pressor responses in the rat

Fadi Xu1*, Jianguo Zhuang1, Tong-Ron Zhou1, Tonya Gibson1, and Donald T. Frazier1

1 Department of Physiology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY 40536, USA

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: fadixu{at}uky.edu.

Activation of the vestibular system can either increase or decrease ventilation. The objectives of the present study were to clarify whether these different responses are the result of activating different vestibular subnuclei, by addressing three questions. Do neurones within the medial, lateral and spinal vestibular nuclei (VNM, VNL and VNS, respectively) function differently in respiratory modulation? Is the ventral medullary nucleus gigantocellularis (NGC) required to fully express the VN-mediated respiratory responses? Is glutamate, by acting on N-methyl-D-aspartic acid (NMDA) receptors in the vestibular subnuclei, capable of modulating respiration? In anaesthetized, tracheotomized and spontaneously breathing rats, electrical stimuli (< 10 s) applied in the VNL and VNS significantly elevated ventilation by 35 % and 30 % (P < 0.05), respectively. However, VNM stimulation produced stastically significant (P < 0.05) changes that differed depending upon the stimulation site: either ventilatory inhibition (by 40 % in 57 % of the trials) or excitation (by 55 % in 43 % of trials), and which were often accompanied by a pressor response. These electrical-stimulation-evoked cardiorespiratory responses were almost eliminated following microinjection of ibotenic acid into the stimulation sites (P < 0.05) or bilaterally into the NGC (P < 0.05). As compared to vehicle, microinjection of NMDA into the unilateral VNM, VNL and VNS significantly increased ventilation to 74 %, 58 % and 60 % (P < 0.05), respectively, with no effect on arterial blood pressure. These data suggest that neurones within the vestibular subnuclei play different roles in cardiorespiratory modulation, and that the integrity of the NGC is essential for the full expression of these VN-mediated responses. The evoked respiratory excitatory responses are probably mediated by glutamate acting on NMDA receptors, whereas the neurotransmitters involved in VNM-mediated respiratory inhibition and hypertension remain unknown.




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