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Carviobascular alterations associated with bursts of panting in the exercising dog
Author(s) -
Dampney R. A. L.
Publication year - 1974
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.1974.sp010508
Subject(s) - baroreceptor , heart rate , blood pressure , reflex , propranolol , carotid sinus , peripheral chemoreceptors , denervation , medicine , anesthesia , vasodilation , reflex bradycardia , atropine , stimulation , chemistry , carotid body
1. In conscious dogs exercising on a treadmill variations in arterial blood pressure and heart rate which were correlated with bursts of panting were observed. The blood pressure variations reflected similar variations in the total peripheral vascular resistance. 2. During exercise a change in respiration from slow breathing to panting was followed by a systemic vasodilatation and fall in blood pressure, but a rise in heart rate. Analysis of the time course of these effects demonstrated that the heart rate increase occurred later than the blood pressure fall. 3. The correlation between panting and blood pressure changes was not abolished by either of the receptor‐blocking drugs atropine sulphate or propranolol, nor by either of the following surgical procedures: acute bilateral cervical vagotomy, and denervation of the carotid sinus baroreceptors and carotid body chemoreceptors. 4. The vasodilatation which followed a burst of panting appeared to be due to a decrease in adrenergic vasoconstrictor sympathetic nerve activity, and not to a change in the chemical composition of the arterial blood. 5. It is concluded that the vascular changes are not reflex responses to stimulation of peripheral receptors by the bursts of panting. Instead, it is suggested that both the bursts of panting and associated falls in blood pressure are parallel effects resulting from activation at a suprabulbar level of the central nervous system. It is also concluded that the variations in heart rate are mediated by the baroreceptor reflex mechanism, activated by the changes in mean blood pressure.