Articles: pressoreceptors-physiology.
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Baroreceptors are mechanosensitive elements of the peripheral nervous system that maintain homeostasis by coordinating physiologic responses to external and internal stimuli. While it is recognized that carotid and cardiopulmonary baroreceptor reflexes modulate autonomic output to mitigate excessive fluctuations in arterial blood pressure and to maintain intravascular volume, increasing evidence suggests that baroreflex pathways also project to key regions of the central nervous system that regulate somatosensory, somatomotor, and central nervous system arousal. ⋯ The contribution of baroreceptor function to postoperative outcomes is also presented. Finally, methods that enhance baroreceptor function, which hold promise in improving postoperative and pain management outcomes, are presented.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Mar 2012
ReviewThe Bainbridge and the "reverse" Bainbridge reflexes: history, physiology, and clinical relevance.
Francis A. Bainbridge demonstrated in 1915 that an infusion of saline or blood into the jugular vein of the anesthetized dog produced tachycardia. His findings after transection of the cardiac autonomic nerve supply and injection of the cholinergic blocking drug atropine demonstrated that the tachycardia was reflex in origin, with the vagus nerves constituting the afferent limb and a withdrawal of vagal tone the primary efferent limb. ⋯ The Bainbridge reflex is invoked throughout the anesthesia literature to describe the effect of changes in venous return on heart rate in patients in the surgical and critical care settings, but a critical analysis of the experimental and clinical evidence is lacking. Our main objectives in this review are to summarize the history of the Bainbridge reflex, to describe its anatomy and physiology, and to discuss the evidence for and against it having an influence on heart rate changes observed clinically. The interaction of the Bainbridge reflex with the arterial baroreceptor and Bezold-Jarisch reflexes is discussed.
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The discovery of the Bainbridge reflex 70 years ago, of a tachycardic response to a rise in central venous pressure, stimulated a lot of interest in this and other cardiovascular reflexes. The mechanoreceptors that elicit the reflex are located at the junction of the right atrium and caval veins or at the junctions of the pulmonary veins and the left atrium. The Bainbridge reflex is controversial, however, because its existence cannot always be demonstrated. ⋯ This paper reviews the history of the studies associated with the reflex. Results are reported, which demonstrate that the chronotropic response to i.v. infusions depends upon the resulting change in aortic diameter; bradycardia is evoked by infusions leading to a rise in aortic baroreceptor activity through increases in aortic diameter, volume or pressure; tachycardia follows whenever the infusion fails to trigger the baroreflex. The importance of the Bainbridge reflex as a counterbalance to the baroreceptor reflex is discussed.