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. 1990 Apr;423:241–255. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.1990.sp018020

Sympathetic discharges in the human supraorbital nerve and their relation to sudo- and vasomotor responses.

M Nordin 1
PMCID: PMC1189755  PMID: 2388150

Abstract

1. Sympathetic nerve activity occurring as bursts of multi-unit impulses was recorded with tungsten microelectrodes in the supraorbital nerve of awake healthy subjects. Within the fascicular innervation zone on the forehead, skin resistance was measured as an indicator of sweat gland activity, and skin blood flow was measured with laser-doppler flowmetry. 2. At room temperature, there was little or no background burst activity, but arousal stimuli or mental stress evoked bursts followed by a vasodilator response. Provided repeated arousal stimuli were delivered, individual bursts were followed by a decrease in skin resistance. 3. Body heating induced increasing background burst activity. After an initial period without associated electrodermal activity, there were decreases in skin resistance, which showed a positive linear correlation with the amplitude of the preceding burst. Individual bursts were followed by a vasodilator response with an average onset latency of 2.8 s and an average duration of 9.1 s, and rapid increases in blood flow coincided with a marked increase in burst activity. Arousal stimuli evoked bursts followed by both vasodilator and skin resistance responses. 4. During body cooling, there was no background burst activity, but signs of relatively weak, probably neurally mediated vasoconstriction were observed and arousal-evoked bursts were reduced or abolished, as were the associated vasodilator and skin resistance responses. 5. It is concluded that body heating induces active sympathetic vasodilatation in the skin of the human forehead, and that this is either sudomotor-mediated or caused by vasodilator fibres firing in synchrony with sudomotor fibres. A similar sympathetic mechanism probably underlies the vasodilator responses evoked by arousal stimuli and mental stress.

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Selected References

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