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  Vol. 30 No. 4, OCTOBER 1922 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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STUDIES ON THE VISCERAL SENSORY NERVOUS SYSTEM

XIV. THE REFLEX CONTROL OF THE CARDIA AND LOWER ESOPHAGUS IN MAMMALS

A. J. CARLSON, Ph.D., M.D.; T. E. BOYD; J. F. PEARCY

Arch Intern Med. 1922;30(4):409-433.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

LITERATURE

The literature on the reflex control of the cardia and lower esophagus is rather meager, in view of the importance of this question in connection with spasms of the cardia and esophagus in man. Most of the work has been done in connection with the deglutition and vomiting acts.

It was reported in a previous communication that the cardia and the lower end of the esophagus are provided with motor and inhibitory efferents both via the vagi and the splanchnic nerves.1 We now know that in the swallowing act the vagi efferents are controlled by afferent impulses both from the pharynx (primary peristalsis) and the wall of the esophagus (secondary peristalsis).2 Furthermore, the cardia and the part of the esophagus made up of smooth musculature and Auerbach's nervous plexus are capable of local coordination, that is, local automatism or reflex action, independent of afferent and efferent connections with the . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

CHICAGO

From the Hull Physiological Laboratory of the University of Chicago.



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