NTS

Definition

A brainstem nucleus serving as the primary relay center for sensory signals carried by the vagus nerve. It processes visceral and autonomic information from organs throughout the chest and abdomen, and plays a central role in vagal signaling pathways.

The brainstem's first relay for vagal signals

The nucleus tractus solitarius is located in the medulla oblongata, the lowest part of the brainstem. It receives the majority of visceral sensory input arriving via the vagus nerve's afferent fibers — including information about organ states, blood chemistry, and inflammatory signals from the thorax and abdomen.

From the NTS, signals are distributed to other brainstem regions and higher brain centers involved in autonomic regulation. In the context of vagus nerve stimulation, the NTS is the first central relay point: signals from a taVNS device travel up the ABVN, enter the brainstem via the NTS, and propagate from there to circuits involved in autonomic and immune modulation.

Reviewed by

Ulf Andersson

Professor of Pediatric Rheumatology, Karolinska Institutet

Worked at Karolinska for five decades as a clinician and a basic scientist focusing on inflammation. Co-discoverer of HMGB1 as the prototype alarmin molecule. Honorary doctor at Hofstra University in New York. Highly Cited Clarivate Researcher Web of Science awards.

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