Previous work has shown that the carotid body glomus cells can function as glucose sensors. The activation of these chemoreceptors, and of its afferent nucleus in the brainstem (solitary tract nucleus - STn), induces rapid changes in blood glucose levels and brain glucose retention. Nitric oxide (NO) in STn has been suggested to play a key role in the processing of baroreceptor signaling initiated in the carotid sinus [1]. However, the relationship between changes in NO in STn and carotid body induced glycemic changes has not been studied. Here we investigated in anesthetized rats how changes in brain glucose retention, induced by the local stimulation of carotid body chemoreceptors with sodium cyanide (NaCN), were affected by modulation of...