The vagus nerve regulates immunometabolic homeostasis in the ovine fetus near term: impact on terminal ileum
Mingju Cao, Shikha Kuthiala, Keven Jason Jean, Hai Lun Liu, Marc, Courchesne, Karen Nygard, Patrick Burns, Andr\'e Desrochers, Gilles Fecteau,, Christophe Faure, and Martin G. Frasch

TL;DR
This study investigates how the vagus nerve influences immune and metabolic regulation in near-term fetal sheep, revealing its role in controlling inflammation and glucose levels during endotoxin-induced stress.
Contribution
It demonstrates that vagotomy delays and alters fetal inflammatory and metabolic responses, and that efferent vagus nerve stimulation can modulate these effects.
Findings
Vagotomy delays inflammatory response onset.
Efferent VNS reduces systemic inflammation.
Vagotomy causes sustained hyperglycemia and hyperinsulinemia.
Abstract
The contribution of the vagus nerve to inflammation and glucosensing in the fetus is not understood. We hypothesized that vagotomy (Vx) will trigger a rise in systemic glucose levels and this will be enhanced during systemic and organ-specific inflammation. Efferent vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) should reverse this phenotype. Near-term fetal sheep (n=57) were surgically prepared with vascular catheters and ECG electrodes as control and treatment groups (lipopolysaccharide (LPS), Vx+LPS, Vx+LPS+selective efferent VNS). Fetal arterial blood samples were drawn for 7 days to profile inflammation (IL-6), insulin, blood gas and metabolism (glucose). At 54 h, a necropsy was performed; terminal ileum macrophages; CD11c (M1 phenotype) immunofluorescence was quantified to detect inflammation. Across the treatment groups, blood gas and cardiovascular changes indicated mild septicemia. At 3 h, in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVagus Nerve Stimulation Research · Neonatal and fetal brain pathology · Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
