Afferent neurons contained within cardiac sympathetic nerves may have important influences on the circulation when activated during myocardial ischemia. Although such activation is known to reflexly excite upper thoracic sympathetic efferent neurons, effects on other components of sympathetic outflow are unknown. Therefore, cardiac sympathetic afferent nerves were stimulated by occlusion of coronary arteries to investigate their reflex influences on renal sympathetic nerve activity and systemic arterial blood pressure. Responses were observed in anesthetized cats in which sympathetic and/or vagal cardiac afferent nerves remained intact and arterial baroreceptors remained intact or had been denervated. Stimulating sympathetic afferent neurons caused excitation of renal nerve activity, which was accompanied by variable changes in arterial pressure. Stimulation of vagal afferents by coronary occlusion consistently produced inhibition of renal nerve activity and marked depressor responses. When both components of cardiac innervation remained intact, increases or decreases in renal nerve activity and blood pressure were elicited by coronary artery occlusion in the presence or absence of arterial baroreceptors. These results illustrate that cardiac sympathetic afferent nerves can contribute significantly to cardiovascular control during myocardial ischemia.
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