A Nigro-Vagal Pathway Controls Gastric Motility and is Affected in a Rat Model of Parkinsonism

In most patients with Parkinson’s disease, gastrointestinal (GI) dysfunctions, such as gastroparesis and constipation, are prodromal to the cardinal motor symptoms of the disease. Sporadic Parkinson’s disease has been proposed to develop following ingestion of neurotoxicants that affect the brain–gut axis via the vagus nerve, and then travel to higher centers compromising the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc), and, later, the cerebral cortex. We aimed to identify the pathway that connects the brainstem vagal nuclei and the SNpc, and to determine whether this pathway is compromised in a rat model of Parkinsonism.

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