Comparative formaldehyde-induced and glyoxylic acid-induced fluorescence histochemical studies on the intrinsic adrenergic innervation of the intestine and the liver of normal and vagotomized cats
- PMID: 104525
- DOI: 10.1016/S0065-1281(78)80085-3
Comparative formaldehyde-induced and glyoxylic acid-induced fluorescence histochemical studies on the intrinsic adrenergic innervation of the intestine and the liver of normal and vagotomized cats
Abstract
The inbuilt intrinsic adrenergic nervous apparatus of the intestine and liver of the cat was studied using 1. the formaldehyde-induced fluorescence histochemical method and 2. the glyoxylic acid-induced fluorescence histochemical method for serial microtome sections and whole mount tissue layers or smear preparations. In addition, the effect of I) total abdominal infra-diaphragmatic vagotomy with or without associated Finney-type gastro-duodenostomy and II) unilateral (left or right) and bilateral cervical vagotomy with or without tracheostomy on the intrinsic adrenergic innervation was tested. Fluorescing varicose axons, both "free" (i.e. unrelated to the blood vessels) and gathered to typical perivascular nerve plexuses were observed in all segments and all layers of the wall of the intestine. The density of the adrenergic innervation varied remarkably from an area to another, even in the same segment and tissue layer, which makes comparative estimations of the density of the innervation very difficult. However, the intrinsic adrenergic innervation of the circular muscle layer of the colon and the rectum seems to be consistently quite rich, and in the rectum, also the longitudinal muscle layer is relatively heavily innervated. It thus seems obvious that (in the cat) also the direct adrenergic innervation of the external smooth muscle layers is of considerable importance, specially in the rectum. In contrast, the results of the present study clearly indicate that the liver parenchyma (of the cat) is devoid of functional intrinsic adrenergic innervation. Vagotomies did not cause any changes in the intrinsic adrenergic innervation of the intestine and liver: even after complete vagotomy no reduction was observed in the number of fluorescing axons or in the intensity of the fluorescence. Consequently, the vagal contribution of adrenergic axons to the liver and the intestine must be negligible, at least in the cat. The use of the glyoxylic acid-induced fluorescence histochemical method and whole-mount tissue layers was found most suitable for mapping and comparative estimation of the density of the intrinsic adrenergic nerve net, and is therefore recommended for other similar or related studies.
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