Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9911027 Annals of Anatomy - Anatomischer Anzeiger 2005 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
The present immunohistochemical study set out to determine the extent of perivascular innervation in the rat heart, using markers for noradrenergic sympathetic fibres (tyrosine hydroxylase=TH), cholinergic parasympathetic fibres (vesicular acetylcholine transporter=VAChT), nitrergic fibres (neuronal NO synthase=nNOS), and peptidergic sensory fibres (calcitonin gene-related peptide=CGRP). For each of these antigens, the vascular innervation density was assessed separately in the atria, the basal and the apical parts of the ventricles, and was correlated to the inner vascular diameter. The four major findings are: (1) Each of these neurochemically defined populations shows an individual distribution pattern significantly different from the others with respect to correlation with vascular diameter and occurrence along atrial versus ventricular vessels. (2) Among autonomic efferent axons, nNOS-containing fibres are far less numerous than cholinergic and noradrenergic fibres. (3) Autonomic efferent axons (noradrenergic, cholinergic, nitrergic) are much more abundant around atrial than ventricular vessels, whereas perivascular CGRP-immunoreactive sensory nerve fibres are equally distributed in the various parts of the heart. (4) Noradrenergic and cholinergic axons preferentially innervate small-diameter vessels (negative linear correlation between index of innervation and vascular diameter), whereas the supply with CGRP-immunoreactive sensory nerve fibres does not change with vascular diameter. Collectively, the present study shows individual distribution patterns for each of the neurochemically defined populations of perivascular axons along the atrial and ventricular coronary arteries, indicating a highly differentiated nervous regulation of atrial versus ventricular, and large-diameter versus resistance vessels.
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