Effects of sound stimulation on the central artery of the rabbit ear were studied as a somato-autonomic reflex. Vasoconstriction and dilatation, caused by metronome sound stimulation, were estimated from the temperature fluctuations in the central artery of the ear, measured by a thermistor. To enhance the detection of temperature rises, moderately high background levels of arterial tone were established by exposing the tips of the ears to water at a temperature of 10°C or 5°C, prior to sound stimulation. A fall in arterial temperature due to vasoconstriction was observed immediately after the start of the 1-min sound stimulation, with a subsequent temperature rise which overshot the original basal level due to vasodilatation. A positive correlation between the ear temperature before sound stimulation and the temperature fall (p<0.01), and a negative correlation between the ear temperature and the temperature rise (p<0.05) were obtained. The temperature fall was blocked by phenoxybenzamine (9 mg/kg, i.p., p<0.01). The subsequent rise was not influenced by atropine (3 mg/kg, i.p.) or phenoxybenzamine, however, it was attenuated by hexamethonium (6mg/kg, i.p., p<0.05). The temperature fall at the beginning of sound stimulation was related to alpha-adrenergic mechanism. The subsequent temperature rise was thought to be related to parasympathetic mechanism, excluding cholinergic mechanism.
CITATION STYLE
Takeoka, M., Ueda, G., Taguchi, K., Ge, R. L., Terasawa, K., & Tsuchiya, K. (1996). Sound stimulation-induced vasomotor reflex in the central artery of the rabbit ear. Tohoku Journal of Experimental Medicine, 178(2), 101–111. https://doi.org/10.1620/tjem.178.101
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