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Central Cardiovascular Control: Basic and Clinical Aspects

✍ Scribed by G. Stock, M. Schmelz, M. M. Knuepfer, W. G. Forssmann (auth.), Dr. Detlev Ganten M.D., Ph.D., Dr. Donald Pfaff Ph.D. (eds.)


Publisher
Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Year
1983
Tongue
English
Leaves
194
Series
Current Topics in Neuroendocrinology 3
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The most prominent function of the central nervous system is the control of motor functions by rapidly transmitted impulses through efferent cranial and spinal peripheral nerves. Besides electrically transmitted neural impulses, humoral mechanisms with more sustained actions are exercised by the brain and spinal cord to regulate body homeostasis. Thus, the brain may be regarded as an "endocrine gland" discharging neurohormones (peptides) either into the general circulation (neurohypophyseal hormones) or into the hypothalamo-adenohypophyseal portal circulation (releasing and inhibiting hormones). The brain, therefore, which is protected by the blood-brain barrier from disturbing and potentially noxious exogenous and endogenous agents circulating in the blood, has to have certain neurohemal regions beyond this barrier, such as the neural lobe and the median eminence (infundibulum), where neurohorΒ­ mones have free access to the blood stream. To regulate somatic and autonomic functions in the best possible way, the central nervous system is highly dependent on feedback signals conveyed through somatic and visceral afferent nerves as well as on peripheral humoral signals such as peripheral hormones and other circulating substances that are under homeostatic regulation, e. g. , peptides, arnines, electrolytes, and other biologically active agents. In this chapter, the role of the blood-brain barrier in the regulation of these subΒ­ stances will be discussed with special emphasis on the access through the blood-brain barrier to cardiovascular centers. 2 The Blood-Brain Barrier 2.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-v
Functional and Anatomic Aspects of Central Nervous Cardiovascular Regulation....Pages 1-30
Autonomic Nervous System and Blood Pressure Control in Normotensive and Hypertensive Conditions....Pages 31-61
Reflex Control of Circulation in Normotensive and Hypertensive Humans....Pages 63-86
Corticotropin-Releasing Factor: Central Nervous System Effects on the Sympathetic Nervous System and Cardiovascular Regulation....Pages 87-101
Neuropeptides and Central Blood Pressure Regulation....Pages 103-123
Centrally Acting Drugs as a Tool to Study Central Mechanisms of Blood Pressure Control....Pages 125-149
The Blood-Brain Barrier and its Role in the Control of Circulating Hormone Effects on the Brain....Pages 151-186
Back Matter....Pages 187-194

✦ Subjects


Neurology; Neurosciences


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