Literature DB >> 34634781

Gastric neurons in the nucleus tractus solitarius are selective to the orientation of gastric electrical stimulation.

Jiayue Cao1, Xiaokai Wang1, Terry L Powley2, Zhongming Liu1,3.   

Abstract

Objective.Gastric electrical stimulation (GES) is a bioelectric intervention for gastroparesis, obesity, and other functional gastrointestinal disorders. In a potential mechanism of action, GES activates the nerve endings of vagal afferent neurons and induces the vago-vagal reflex through the nucleus tractus solitarius (NTS) in the brainstem. However, it is unclear where and how to stimulate in order to optimize the vagal afferent responses.Approach.To address this question with electrophysiology in rats, we applied mild electrical currents to two serosal targets on the distal forestomach with dense distributions of vagal intramuscular arrays (IMAs) that innervated the circular and longitudinal smooth muscle layers. During stimulation, we recorded single and multi-unit responses from gastric neurons in NTS and evaluated how the recorded responses depended on the stimulus orientation and amplitude.Main results.We found that NTS responses were highly selective to the stimulus orientation for a range of stimulus amplitudes. The strongest responses were observed when the applied current flowed in the same direction as the IMAs in parallel with the underlying smooth muscle fibers. Our results suggest that gastric neurons in NTS may encode the orientation-specific activity of gastric smooth muscles relayed by vagal afferent neurons.Significance.This finding suggests that the orientation of GES is critical to effective engagement of vagal afferents and should be considered in light of the structural phenotypes of vagal terminals in the stomach.
© 2021 IOP Publishing Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  gastric electrical stimulation; intramuscular array; nucleus tractus solitarius; orientation selectivity

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34634781      PMCID: PMC8625070          DOI: 10.1088/1741-2552/ac2ec6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neural Eng        ISSN: 1741-2552            Impact factor:   5.043


  61 in total

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8.  Human gastric myoelectric activity and gastric emptying following gastric surgery and with pacing.

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