Neuroscience research
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Neuroscience research · Jan 2000
Direct projection from the cardiovascular control region of the cerebellar cortex, the lateral nodulus-uvula, to the brainstem in rabbits.
In decerebrate unanesthetized rabbits, electrical stimulation of the lateral nodulus-uvula in the cerebellar vermal cortex evoked an increase in renal sympathetic nerve activity, an increase in blood pressure and a decrease in renal arterial blood flow, which were all in contrast to the effects reported previously in the anesthetized rabbits. In order to identify the pathway mediating these responses, we investigated the Purkinje cell projection from the lateral nodulus-uvula using both anterograde (biotinylated dextran amine, BDA) and retrograde (horseradish peroxidase, HRP) tracing methods in rabbits. When BDA was iontophoretically injected into the lateral nodulus-uvula, labeled Purkinje cell axons were found within and around the superior and inferior cerebellar peduncles (SCP and ICP, respectively). ⋯ When HRP was microinjected into the lateral PB, retrogradely labeled Purkinje cells were found in the lateral nodulus-uvula. These results indicate that Purkinje cells in the lateral nodulus-uvula project into the vestibular nuclei via the ICP and to the lateral PB via the SCP. We suggest that these two pathways mediating cardiovascular responses have different sensitivities to anesthetics.