The influence of the sympathetic impulse pattern on contractile responses of rat mesenteric arteries and veins

1985 
Contractile responses to electrical field stimulation of excised small mesenteric arteries and veins of the rat were compared when stimuli were delivered in irregular bursts or at regular intervals. Spontaneously occurring skin vasoconstrictor impulses in a few-unit median nerve recording in man were stored on tape and used to trigger a stimulator. Two irregular stimulation sequences at average frequencies of 1.6 and 1.8 Hz, respectively, were used. In the arteries, average contractile responses were significantly greater at an irregular than at an even stimulation frequency, but in the veins, similar degrees of contraction were obtained with the two modes of stimulation. The frequency-response relationships to continuous regular stimulation showed the artery to respond less than the vein at low frequencies. This apparently explains the difference in behaviour between the vessels to irregular stimulation. The results show that not only the number of impulses, but also their pattern of occurrence, may influence the degree of vasoconstriction. Thus, the normal irregular sympathetic discharge pattern in itself has a bearing on the physiology of neuro-effector control mechanisms.
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