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Myocardial infarction reduces cardiac nociceptive neurotransmission through the vagal ganglia
Siamak Salavatian, Jonathan D. Hoang, Naoko Yamaguchi, Zulfiqar Ali Lokhandwala, Mohammed Amer Swid, John Andrew Armour, Jeffrey L. Ardell, Marmar Vaseghi
Siamak Salavatian, Jonathan D. Hoang, Naoko Yamaguchi, Zulfiqar Ali Lokhandwala, Mohammed Amer Swid, John Andrew Armour, Jeffrey L. Ardell, Marmar Vaseghi
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Research Article Cardiology Neuroscience

Myocardial infarction reduces cardiac nociceptive neurotransmission through the vagal ganglia

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Abstract

Myocardial infarction causes pathological changes in the autonomic nervous system, which exacerbate heart failure and predispose to fatal ventricular arrhythmias and sudden death. These changes are characterized by sympathetic activation and parasympathetic dysfunction (reduced vagal tone). Reasons for the central vagal withdrawal and, specifically, whether myocardial infarction causes changes in cardiac vagal afferent neurotransmission that then affect efferent tone, remain unknown. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether myocardial infarction causes changes in vagal neuronal afferent signaling. Using in vivo neural recordings from the inferior vagal (nodose) ganglia and immunohistochemical analyses, structural and functional alterations in vagal sensory neurons were characterized in a chronic porcine infarct model and compared with normal animals. Myocardial infarction caused an increase in the number of nociceptive neurons but a paradoxical decrease in functional nociceptive signaling. No changes in mechanosensitive neurons were observed. Notably, nociceptive neurons demonstrated an increase in GABAergic expression. Given that nociceptive signaling through the vagal ganglia increases efferent vagal tone, the results of this study suggest that a decrease in functional nociception, possibly due to an increase in expression of inhibitory neurotransmitters, may contribute to vagal withdrawal after myocardial infarction.

Authors

Siamak Salavatian, Jonathan D. Hoang, Naoko Yamaguchi, Zulfiqar Ali Lokhandwala, Mohammed Amer Swid, John Andrew Armour, Jeffrey L. Ardell, Marmar Vaseghi

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Figure 2

Immunohistochemical assessment of neurons in the porcine nodose ganglia.

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Immunohistochemical assessment of neurons in the porcine nodose ganglia....
Representative images of nodose ganglia from normal (left) and LAD-infarcted (right) pig nodose ganglion stained and quantified for (A and B) P2RX3, (C and D) CGRP, (E and F) PIEZO2, and (G and H) NOS1. Expression of P2RX3 and CGRP were increased after chronic LAD infarction (P = 0.005 for normal vs. infarcted animals for P2RX3 and CGRP). PIEZO2 expression remained unchanged (P = 0.32). Expression of NOS1 in the nodose ganglia was reduced after LAD infarction (P = 0.002 for normal vs. infarcted animals). n = 10 pigs per group for P2RX3 and CGRP quantification, n = 5 pigs per group for PIEZO2, and n = 8 pigs per group for NOS1; data are shown as mean ± SEM; unpaired, 2-tailed Student’s t test was used for comparisons. Scale bars are 50 μm.

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