Literature DB >> 24715571

Vestibulo-sympathetic responses.

Bill J Yates1, Philip S Bolton, Vaughan G Macefield.   

Abstract

Evidence accumulated over 30 years, from experiments on animals and human subjects, has conclusively demonstrated that inputs from the vestibular otolith organs contribute to the control of blood pressure during movement and changes in posture. This review considers the effects of gravity on the body axis, and the consequences of postural changes on blood distribution in the body. It then separately considers findings collected in experiments on animals and human subjects demonstrating that the vestibular system regulates blood distribution in the body during movement. Vestibulosympathetic reflexes differ from responses triggered by unloading of cardiovascular receptors such as baroreceptors and cardiopulmonary receptors, as they can be elicited before a change in blood distribution occurs in the body. Dissimilarities in the expression of vestibulosympathetic reflexes in humans and animals are also described. In particular, there is evidence from experiments in animals, but not humans, that vestibulosympathetic reflexes are patterned, and differ between body regions. Results from neurophysiological and neuroanatomical studies in animals are discussed that identify the neurons that mediate vestibulosympathetic responses, which include cells in the caudal aspect of the vestibular nucleus complex, interneurons in the lateral medullary reticular formation, and bulbospinal neurons in the rostral ventrolateral medulla. Recent findings showing that cognition can modify the gain of vestibulosympathetic responses are also presented, and neural pathways that could mediate adaptive plasticity in the responses are proposed, including connections of the posterior cerebellar vermis with the vestibular nuclei and brainstem nuclei that regulate blood pressure.
© 2014 American Physiological Society.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24715571      PMCID: PMC3999523          DOI: 10.1002/cphy.c130041

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Compr Physiol        ISSN: 2040-4603            Impact factor:   9.090


  306 in total

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Authors:  C A Ray; K M Hume; S L Steele
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6.  Orthostatic tolerance, cerebral oxygenation, and blood velocity in humans with sympathetic failure.

Authors:  M P Harms; W N Colier; W Wieling; J W Lenders; N H Secher; J J van Lieshout
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  58 in total

1.  Low-intensity ultrasound activates vestibular otolith organs through acoustic radiation force.

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3.  Random-amplitude sinusoidal linear acceleration causes greater vestibular modulation of skin sympathetic nerve activity than constant-amplitude acceleration.

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Review 5.  Recent advances in orthostatic hypotension presenting orthostatic dizziness or vertigo.

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Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2015-08-21       Impact factor: 3.307

6.  Imidazoleacetic acid-ribotide in vestibulo-sympathetic pathway neurons.

Authors:  Gay R Holstein; Victor L Friedrich; Giorgio P Martinelli
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7.  Decreased otolith-mediated vestibular response in 25 astronauts induced by long-duration spaceflight.

Authors:  Emma Hallgren; Ludmila Kornilova; Erik Fransen; Dmitrii Glukhikh; Steven T Moore; Gilles Clément; Angelique Van Ombergen; Hamish MacDougall; Ivan Naumov; Floris L Wuyts
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2016-03-23       Impact factor: 2.714

8.  Neurocardiology: a neurobiologist's perspective.

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9.  Effects of hypergravity on gene levels in anti-gravity muscle and bone through the vestibular system in mice.

Authors:  Naoyuki Kawao; Hironobu Morita; Kazuaki Nishida; Koji Obata; Kohei Tatsumi; Hiroshi Kaji
Journal:  J Physiol Sci       Date:  2017-09-07       Impact factor: 2.781

10.  Association between Syncope and Tumarkin Attacks in Ménière's Disease.

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