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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Peripheral chemoreceptors sustain central chemoreflex potentiation and cardiorespiratory abnormalities in high-output heart failure.

Journal:
Basic research in cardiology
Year:
2026
Authors:
Pereyra, Katherin V et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Physiology
Species:
rodent

Abstract

Central chemoreflex activation worsens cardiorespiratory dysfunction in high-output heart failure (HO-HF). Recently, interdependence between both peripheral and central chemoreceptors has been linked to alterations in cardiorespiratory regulation. Whether central chemoreflex potentiation in HO-HF requires sensory inputs from peripheral chemoreceptors remains completely unknown. Accordingly, we hypothesized that peripheral-central chemoreceptor interaction promotes cardiorespiratory dysfunction in non-ischemic HO-HF. We used male Sprague-Dawley rats to investigate the role of carotid bodies (CBs), the main peripheral chemoreceptors, on autonomic, respiratory, and cardiac function alterations during the progression of HO-HF. CB denervation (CBD) was used to eliminate CB inputs in HO-HF rats. The effect of CBD on HO-HF related cardiac, autonomic, and ventilatory function was measured using echocardiography, pressure-volume loop analysis, electrocardiography, plethysmography, and telemetry. HO-HF rats exhibited enhanced central chemoreflex drive, irregular breathing, autonomic imbalance, cardiac electrophysiological abnormalities, cardiac diastolic dysfunction, and cardiac hypertrophy. Remarkably, CBD completely normalized central chemoreflex function in HO-HF rats, restored ventilatory stability, reduced apnea-hypopnea incidence, improved heart rate variability, shortened QRS and PR intervals, attenuated collagen deposition, and ameliorated diastolic dysfunction. Additionally, CBD also corrected respiratory-cardiovascular coupling abnormalities in HO-HF rats. These findings demonstrate that an intact and functional CB is necessary for the development of cardiorespiratory disturbances in non-ischemic HO-HF. Targeting CB-central chemoreceptor interdependence may represent a novel therapeutic approach for non-ischemic HO-HF.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41449201/