Back to Search Start Over

Pulmonary vascular innervation and its role in responses to hypoxia: size matters!

Authors :
Kummer W
Source :
Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society [Proc Am Thorac Soc] 2011 Nov; Vol. 8 (6), pp. 471-6.
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

The pulmonary vasculature is innervated by specific subsets of sympathetic, parasympathetic, and sensory nerve fibers. In contrast to most other organs, innervation density is highest at large-caliber vessels and decreases toward the periphery, and reactivity to vasoactive compounds also changes along the course. In some species, such as the experimentally widely used rodents rat and mouse, autonomic efferent (sympathetic and parasympathetic) perivascular axons barely reach beyond the lung hilus, whereas in humans this innervation extends to small intrapulmonary vessels. Throughout, the most distal arterioles (i.e., intraacinar arteries equipped with an incomplete coat of intermediate cells instead of a full muscular wall) are devoid of innervation. Altogether, 10 vasoactive substances (3 small molecular transmitters and 7 neuropeptides) at minimum have been identified in various combinations (cotransmission) in pulmonary vascular axons. Analysis of this "neurochemical coding" has been provided only for the guinea pig so far, but not for humans or for animal species commonly used for pulmonary vascular research. Sympathetic pulmonary vascular neurons are reflexively activated via arterial chemoreceptors when arterial Po(2) is lowered and adapt the pulmonary vasculature to this condition of increased pulmonary blood flow by α(1)-adrenoreceptor-mediated increase in vascular impedance primarily at large vessels. In contrast, neither they nor other nerve fibers play a role in the local hypoxic vasoconstriction triggered by low alveolar Po(2), which serves to match perfusion to ventilation. The major potential role of the pulmonary vascular innervation, autonomic and sensory, lies in the pronounced trophic activities of its transmitters.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1943-5665
Volume :
8
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
22052922
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1513/pats.201101-013MW