| Literature DB >> 7373372 |
W Young, V DeCrescito, J J Tomasula, V Ho.
Abstract
Spinal cord injury consistently evokes a transient 3- to 4-minute rise is systemic pressure, followed by prolonged hypotension. Because the role of the sympathetic nervous system in these blood pressure changes is not clear, the pressure responses were studied using systematic ablation of the peripheral sympathetic nervous system. In total, 24 cats were subjected to bilateral thoracic sympathectomy, adrenalectomy, splanchnicectomy, combinations of the preceding, sham operation, or no treatment. Either 3 or 24 hours after the ablations, the blood pressure responses were evoked by 400 gm-cm contusions of the thoracic cord. Although neither thoracic sympathectomy nor adrenalectomy alone abolished the hypertensive phase, the combination of the two procedures did. This suggests that both the thoracic sympathetic ganglia and the adrenal glands participate in the pressor response. Thoracic sympathectomy affected primarily the early part, whereas adrenalectomy diminished the later part of the hypertensive response. This correlates with the function of the former being neurally and the latter being humorally mediated. None of the sympathetic lesions consistently affected the hypotensive phase. Spinal contusion injury produces widespread sympathetic activation, mediating the hypertensive changes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1980 PMID: 7373372 DOI: 10.3171/jns.1980.52.4.0473
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurosurg ISSN: 0022-3085 Impact factor: 5.115