Acute Cervical Vagus Nerve Stimulation Modulates Gastric Slow Waves in the Distal Rat Stomach 2025 Du et al

Discussion in 'Other health news and research' started by Andy, Mar 28, 2025.

  1. Andy

    Andy Retired committee member

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    ABSTRACT

    Background
    Gastric motility is coordinated by bioelectrical events, named slow waves, which propagate across the stomach. Gastric dysrhythmias are associated with disorders of gut-brain interaction. Electrical cervical vagus nerve stimulation (cVNS) affects gastric contractions, but associated changes in gastric slow waves have not been quantified.

    Methods
    Three cVNS protocols (low: 0.30 ms, 0.25 mA, 1 Hz; medium: 0.50 ms, 0.50 mA, 5 Hz; high: 1.00 ms, 1.00 mA, 10 Hz) were administered to six rats. Gastric slow waves were concurrently recorded from the serosa of the antrum and distal corpus using flexible electrode arrays. Slow wave amplitude and frequency (mean ± standard deviation) were analyzed with a mixed linear effects model.

    Key Results
    cVNS had no effect on mean slow wave amplitude (p ≥ 0.2208). Slow wave frequency decreased during the high stimulation protocol compared to sham (3.93 ± 0.90 cpm to 3.49 ± 0.54 cpm, p = 0.0374, antrum; 3.94 ± 1.04 cpm to 3.15 ± 0.53 cpm, p < 0.0001, distal corpus) but returned to sham levels after a recovery period (p = 0.9190, antrum; p = 0.9995, distal corpus). Ectopic activation of gastric slow waves occurred during cVNS, resulting in a transient effect on gastric slow wave frequency and propagation but not amplitude.

    Conclusions & Inferences
    Slow wave activity was modified by acute medium and high cVNS stimulation protocols with changes in propagation patterns and mean frequency. Therefore, modified slow wave activity could affect gastric motility function during acute cVNS.


    Summary

    • Rat gastric slow waves were mapped and quantified during cervical vagus nerve stimulation (cVNS).
    • Medium (0.50 ms, 0.50 mA, 5 Hz) and high (1.00 ms, 1.00 mA, 10 Hz) cVNS decreased slow wave frequency and temporarily disrupted its propagation.
    • Acute high cVNS could have applications in temporarily depressing gastric motility.
    Open access
     
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