Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4350919 | Neuroscience Letters | 2006 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Severe blood loss triggers shock, a precipitous hypotension and bradycardia. The integrity of (i) neurons in the vasodepressor region of the caudal midline medulla and (ii) central 5-HT neurotransmission are critical for the expression of haemorrhagic shock. This study investigated whether progressive blood loss triggers altered synthesis of 5-HT in the vasodepressor region of the caudal midline medulla by measuring changes in relative expression levels of tryptophan hydroxylase 2 (TpH 2) mRNA, the rate-limiting enzyme in the synthesis of neuronal 5-HT. Hypotensive but not normotensive haemorrhage triggered a significant increase in TpH 2 mRNA in the vasodepressor region of the caudal midline medulla, identifying an important role for 5-HT-containing caudal midline medullary neurons in haemorrhagic shock.
Keywords
centigradeRostral ventral lateral medullammHgCMMRVLM5-HTIML18SRT-PCRmRNANTCDNABlood lossdeoxyribonucleic acidRNAribonucleic acidHypotensionOxygenBradycardiabpmReverse transcriptasetyrosine hydroxylasestandard error of the meanMedullary raphemessenger ribonucleic acidSerotoninshockbeats per minuteHeart ratearterial pressureSEMmillimeters of mercurypolymerase chain reactionreverse transcription polymerase chain reactionPCR
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Authors
Heidi J. Brown, Luke A. Henderson, Kevin A. Keay,