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Research Article

Receptive properties of primary afferent fibres from rabbit pleura, in vitro

Pages 229-236 | Published online: 10 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Abstract We investigated the physiological properties of mediastinal pleural primary afferent units by recording single nerve fibre activity from the phrenic nerve in an in vitro preparation of rabbit tissue. A total of 41 units with conduction velocities in the group III and IV range were examined for their responsiveness to mechanical, thermal and chemical stimuli. Most receptive fields were adjacent to the phrenic nerve-pericardiacophrenic artery complex. The thresholds to punctate mechanical stimulation (von Frey hairs) were widely scattered around a median of 5.4 mN; all fibres showed slowly adapting responses to mechanical stimulation. Heat sensitivity was observed in 7/41 units (17%), while 17/41 (41%) of the fibres exhibited a spurious transient excitation to strong and rapid cooling. Chemosensitivity was scarce with respect to capsaicin (7/33 (21%) of the units responding) but more common to CO2-saturated synthetic interstitial fluid (pH 6.1, 5/16 (31%) responding). The most effective stimulus was a mixture of bradykinin, serotonin, histamine and prostaglandin E2 ('inflammmatory soup') which evoked stimulus responses in 27/33 (82%) of the afferent fibres challenged. Sensitization to mechanical stimuli occurred in 5/41 (12%) of the units, following the application of heat or inflammatory mediators. The rabbit pleura appears as a tissue mainly innervated by multimodal mechano- and chemosensitive afferent units.

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