Skip to Content
Interactive Textbook on Clinical Symptom Research Logo


Home Button


Neural Mechanisms of Cardiac Pain
Author Biography
Introduction
Anterolateral System
Somatic vs. Visceral Nociceptive Processing
Angina Pectoris
ympathetic Sensory Innervation
Referred Pain
Currently selected section: SVagal Sensory Innervation
Other Ascending Pathways
Central Sensitization
Thalamus and Cerebral Cortex
Neurophysiology of Angina Pectorsis
Nausea and Vomiting

Dyspnea
Summary

 

Chapter 25:Neural Mechanisms of Cardiac Pain: Vagal Sensory Innervation
        

Interactions of neurons

The interactions among sympathetic afferent, vagal afferent, cervical spinal, and thoracic spinal neurons is much more complex than previous sections of this chapter may indicate.

Stimulation of cardiac sympathetic afferents excites, in addition to the thoracic spinothalamic tract cells already mentioned, more than half of the spinothalamic tract neurons in the C5-C6 segments (Figure 6) (Hobbs et al, 1992).

In contrast to thoracic and mid-cervical spinothalamic tract cells, spinothalamic tract cells in the cervical enlargement (C7-C8) receive little, if any, input from the activity transmitted in cardiac sympathetic afferent fibers; their somatic innervation originates primarily from the distal forelimb and hand. This minimal activation of cells by stimulation of the cardiac sympathetic afferents most likely means that pain would not be referred to the distal forelimb and head, which fits, in general, with clinical observations (Sampson and Cheitlin, 1971; Sylven, 1989).

Since cardiac sympathetic afferent fibers enter the spinal cord primarily in the upper thoracic segments and they do not excite C7-C8 spinothalamic tract cells, the afferent input must be dependent on a propriospinal pathway (e.g. a pathway connecting different spinal segments) originating in the thoracic segments that makes direct or indirect synaptic connections with upper cervical spinothalamic tract cells (Figure 6) (Zhang et al, 1997).

Page 25 of 44
Previous Section