Warning:  Undefined variable $zfal in C:\Inetpub\vhosts\kidney.de\httpdocs\mlpefetch.php on line 525 
 
Deprecated:  str_replace(): Passing null to parameter #3 ($subject) of type array|string is deprecated in C:\Inetpub\vhosts\kidney.de\httpdocs\mlpefetch.php on line 525 
  
 
Warning:  Undefined variable $sterm in C:\Inetpub\vhosts\kidney.de\httpdocs\mlpefetch.php on line 530 
     free
  
Warning:  Undefined variable $sterm in C:\Inetpub\vhosts\kidney.de\httpdocs\mlpefetch.php on line 531 
     free
      free 
   English Wikipedia
  Nephropedia Template TP (
  Twit Text
 
  DeepDyve Pubget Overpricing |    
 
  lüll Central CO2 chemoreception and integrated neural mechanisms of cardiovascular and  respiratory control Guyenet PG; Stornetta RL; Abbott SB; Depuy SD; Fortuna MG; Kanbar RJ Appl Physiol (1985)  2010[Apr]; 108 (4): 995-1002In this review, we examine why blood pressure (BP) and sympathetic nerve activity  (SNA) increase during a rise in central nervous system (CNS) P(CO(2)) (central  chemoreceptor stimulation). CNS acidification modifies SNA by two classes of  mechanisms. The first one depends on the activation of the central respiratory  controller (CRG) and causes the much-emphasized respiratory modulation of the  SNA. The CRG probably modulates SNA at several brain stem or spinal locations,  but the most important site of interaction seems to be the caudal ventrolateral  medulla (CVLM), where unidentified components of the CRG periodically gate the  baroreflex. CNS P(CO(2)) also influences sympathetic tone in a CRG-independent  manner, and we propose that this process operates differently according to the  level of CNS P(CO(2)). In normocapnia and indeed even below the ventilatory  recruitment threshold, CNS P(CO(2)) exerts a tonic concentration-dependent  excitatory effect on SNA that is plausibly mediated by specialized brain stem  chemoreceptors such as the retrotrapezoid nucleus. Abnormally high levels of  P(CO(2)) cause an aversive interoceptive awareness in awake individuals and  trigger arousal from sleep. These alerting responses presumably activate  wake-promoting and/or stress-related pathways such as the orexinergic,  noradrenergic, and serotonergic neurons. These neuronal groups, which may also be  directly activated by brain acidification, have brainwide projections that  contribute to the CO(2)-induced rise in breathing and SNA by facilitating  neuronal activity at innumerable CNS locations. In the case of SNA, these sites  include the nucleus of the solitary tract, the ventrolateral medulla, and the  preganglionic neurons.|Animals[MESH]|Carbon Dioxide/*metabolism[MESH]|Central Nervous System/*physiology[MESH]|Chemoreceptor Cells/*physiology[MESH]|Disease Models, Animal[MESH]|Hemodynamics/*physiology[MESH]|Humans[MESH]|Receptors, Cell Surface/*physiology[MESH]|Respiratory Mechanics/*physiology[MESH] |