Biological Sciences in Space
Online ISSN : 1349-967X
Print ISSN : 0914-9201
ISSN-L : 0914-9201
Effects of Space Flight on the Histological Characteristics of the Aortic Depressor Nerve in the Adult Rat: Electron Microscopic Analysis
Masao YamasakiTsuyoshi ShimizuMasao MiyakeYukako MiyamotoShin-ichiro KatsudaHirotaka O-ishiTadanori NagayamaHidefumi WakiKiyoaki KatahiraHaruyuki WagoToshiyasu OkouchiShunji NagaokaChiaki Mukai
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2004 年 18 巻 2 号 p. 45-51

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The effects of microgravity on the histological characteristics of the aortic depressor nerve, which is the afferent of the aortic baroreflex arc, were determined in 10 female adult rats. The rats were assigned for nursing neonates in the Space Shuttle Columbia or in the animal facility on the ground (NASA Neurolab, STS-90), and were housed for 16 days under microgravity in space (μg, n=5) or under one force of gravity on Earth (one-g, n=5). In the Schwann cell unit in which the axons of unmyelinated fibers are surrounded by one Schwann cell, the average number of axons per unit in the μg group was 2.1 ± 1.6 (mean ± SD, n=312) and significantly less than that in the one-g group (3.0 ± 2.9, n=397, p<0.05). The proportion of unmyelinated fibers in the aortic depressor nerve in the μg group was 64.5 ± 4.4% and significantly less than that in the one-g group(74.0 ± 7.3%, p<0.05). These results show that there is a decrease in the number of high-threshold unmyelinated fibers in the aortic depressor nerve in adult rats flown on the Shuttle Orbiter, suggesting that the aortic baroreflex is depressed under microgravity during space flight.

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© 2004 by Japanese Society for Biological Sciences in Space
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