Central neural pathways for angiotensin-induced thirst
- PMID: 213317
Central neural pathways for angiotensin-induced thirst
Abstract
Evidence is reviewed implicating the preoptic region in angiotensin-induced thirst. The most responsive area according to results obtained with behavioral, electrophysiological, and autoradiographic mapping techniques is at the caudal border of the medial preoptic region and rostral border of the anterior hypothalamus. The neural pathway from this preoptic site for angiotensin-induced thirst extends along the medial forebrain bundle through the midlateral hypothalamus to the paramedial midbrain tegmentum and to an area ventrolateral to the central gray. Lesions of this pathway in the midlateral hypothalamus and rostral midbrain significantly attenuated drinking induced by microinjections of angiotensin II into the preoptic area but did not disrupt water intake induced by microinjections of angiotensin II into the subfornical organ or cerebral ventricles. Although the efferent pathways from angiotensin-receptive sites in the subfornical organ and cerebral ventricles are unknown, it appears from these observations that the medial forebrain bundle is not involved. Lesions of the medial forebrain bundle-lateral hypothalamus also do not disrupt drinking induced by microinjections of hypertonic saline into the preoptic region although lesions placed 1 mm further lateral do. Since fat lateral hypothalamic lesions are without effect on drinking induced by centrally administered angiotensin II, this suggests that intracellular and extracellular thirst signals are subserved by separate neural pathways in the hypothalamus.
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