Cardiovascular reflexes mediated by capsaicin sensitive cardiac afferent neurones in the dog.

Journal: Cardiovascular Research
Published:
Abstract

Reflex circulatory changes mediated by capsaicin sensitive cardiac afferent neurones were studied in anaesthetised, open chest dogs. Application of capsaicin to the epicardium of the left ventricle, either in single doses (0.01-100 micrograms) or by superfusion (20 micrograms X min-1), consistently resulted in dose related increases in blood pressure and heart rate. These responses were not affected by bilateral vagotomy but were abolished or reversed by bilateral sectioning of the upper thoracic (T1-T4) white rami communicantes and stellectomy. Injection of capsaicin (0.3-1 microgram X kg-1) into the left circumflex coronary artery caused either systemic hypotension and bradycardia (70.3% of experiments), a pressor response associated with tachycardia (13.5%), or a biphasic effect with an initial rise and then fall in blood pressure and heart rate (16.2%). With intravenous injections of capsaicin (3-5 micrograms X kg-1) the response was invariably cardioinhibitory and depressor. The reflex bradycardia and hypotension evoked with either intracoronary or intravenous injections of capsaicin were reversed after bilateral vagotomy to increases in cardiac rate and blood pressure. The post-vagotomy tachycardia occurring with intracoronary capsaicin could be abolished by beta adrenoceptor blockade with propranolol (0.5 mg X kg-1 iv), whereas ganglionic transmission blockade with pentolinium (0.5 mg X kg-1 iv) eliminated both the tachycardia and pressor effects. The results indicate that in the dog's heart capsaicin sensitive afferent neurones capable of affecting the circulatory system have both vagal and spinal sympathetic origin. It is suggested that capsaicin induced excitatory cardiogenic reflex is nociceptive in nature and may involve activation of substance P containing afferent fibres incorporated in cardiac sympathetic nerves.

Authors
J Staszewska Woolley, D Luk, P Nolan
Relevant Conditions

Low Blood Pressure, Vagotomy