Stroke, Vol 16, 307-312, Copyright © 1985 by American Heart Association
RD Piper and PJ Goadsby
The dorsal raphe nucleus was stimulated electrically and chemically in 57
cats with blood pressure being measured by an arterial catheter. Blood
pressure rose by a mean of 119.5 +/- 8.9% on stimulation of the dorsal
raphe nucleus at a frequency of 200 sec-1. This pressor response was
frequency-dependent over the range 0.2 to 200 sec-1 and the site of origin
was localized to the dorsal raphe nucleus. The pressor response could also
be obtained by the injection of D,L-homocysteic acid into the nucleus, and
is therefore likely to be due to activation of cell bodies rather than
axons of passage. The response was blocked by high spinal cord section but
was not affected by bilateral clamping of the adrenal glands or
supracollicular decerebration. The pressor response was significantly
reduced by pretreatment of the cats with parachlorophenylalanine (PCPA) and
abolished by the alpha receptor blocker phentolamine, suggesting that both
serotonergic and noradrenergic synapses are involved.
ARTICLES
Pressor response to electrical and chemical stimulation of nucleus raphe dorsalis in the cat
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