Abstract
Extract: Modified stereotaxic techniques were applied to fetal lambs during the latter third of gestation. Electrical stimulation in the region of the hypothalamus in 10 acute experiments was associated with three patterns of arterial blood pressure and heart rate changes: a pressor-tachycardia response; a pure tachycardia response (abolished by propranolol); and a pure bradycardia response (abolished by atropine). The pressor-tachycardia response was examined in detail in 13 chronic preparations (115–135 days of gestation at operation). The systolic arterial blood pressure increase was never greater than 35 mm Hg and was probably blunted by the large noninnervated placental circulation. This pressure increase was abolished by phentolamine and was thus mediated by stimulation of α-adrenergic receptors. The initial tachycardia was prevented by propranolol and was due to β-adrenergic stimulation. The tachycardia was followed in a few seconds by a bradycardia, abolished by atropine and possibly a vagal baroreflex. The pressortachycardia response was accentuated in two lambs who were delivered spontaneously and were studied after birth. These studies indicate that a suprabulbar neural framework exists in the fetal lamb for influencing the cardiovascular system from as early as 90 days of gestation.
Speculation: Since electrical stimulation in the region of the hypothalamus is associated with various changes in blood pressure and heart rate, it is possible that the upper brain stem in the late gestation fetus has a role in the central nervous regulation of the circulation. Complex cardiovascular patterns may be organized in this region in response to fetal stress.
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Williams, R., Hof, R., Heymann, M. et al. Cardiovascular Effects of Electrical Stimulation of the Forebrain in the Fetal Lamb. Pediatr Res 10, 40–45 (1976). https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-197601000-00008
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1203/00006450-197601000-00008