首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Buspirone, a partial agonist of the serotonergic 5-HT1A receptor, improves breathing irregularities in humans with Rett syndrome or brain stem injury. The purpose of this study was to examine whether buspirone alters posthypoxic ventilatory behavior in C57BL/6J (B6) and A/J mouse strains. Measurements of ventilatory behavior were collected from unanesthetized adult male mice (n=6 for each strain) using the plethysmographic method. Mice were given intraperitoneal injections of vehicle or several doses of buspirone and exposed to 2 min of hypoxia (10% O2) followed by rapid reoxygenation (100% O2). Twenty minutes later, mice were tested for hypercapnic response (8% CO(2)-92% O2). On a separate day, mice were injected with the 5-HT1A receptor antagonist 4-iodo-N-{2-[4-(methoxyphenyl)-1-piperazinyl] ethyl}-N-2-pyridinylbenzamide (p-MPPI) before the injection of buspirone, and measurements were repeated. In separate studies, arterial blood-gas analysis was performed for each strain (n=12 in B6 and 10 in A/J) with buspirone or vehicle. In both strains, buspirone stimulated ventilation at rest. In the B6 mice, the hypoxic response was unchanged, but the response to hypercapnia was reduced with buspirone (5 mg/kg; P<0.05). With reoxygenation, vehicle-treated B6 exhibited periodic breathing and greater variation in ventilation compared with A/J (P<0.01). In B6 animals, >or=3 mg/kg of buspirone reduced variation and prevented the occurrence of posthypoxic periodic breathing. Both effects were reversed by p-MPPI. Treatment effect of buspirone was not explained by a difference in resting arterial blood gases. We conclude that buspirone improves posthypoxic ventilatory irregularities in the B6 mouse through its agonist effects on the 5-HT1A receptor.  相似文献   

2.
Nitric oxide (NO) is a regulating factor in respiration. The question was whether NO synthase (NOS) blockade would affect posthypoxic ventilatory behavior similarly in two rat strains with known differences in steady-state hypoxic and hypercapnic responses and in posthypoxic ventilatory behavior. Ventilatory behavior [respiratory frequency (f) and minute ventilation (VE)] was measured by body plethysmography on unanesthetized, unrestrained adult male Sprague-Dawley (SD; n = 8) and Brown Norway rats (BN; n = 8) at baseline and 1 min after rapid transition to 100% O(2) after 5 min of isocapnic hypoxia (10% O(2)-3% CO(2)-balance N(2)). Testing was performed 30 min after intraperitoneal injection of either saline (vehicle) or 100 mg/kg of N(G)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME). Resting f and VE increased after L-NAME in both strains, more markedly in SD compared with BN (77 vs. 47% for f, and 42 vs. 16% for VE, respectively; P < 0.05). With vehicle, posthypoxic f and VE decline (Dejours phenomenon) was present only in BN and was absent in SD. With L-NAME, the Dejours phenomena were still present in BN but also were apparent in SD (f: 95.3 vs. 134.4 beats/min at baseline; VE: 66.3 vs. 88.8 ml/min at baseline; P < 0.05). Thus NOS blockade results in a strain-specific alteration in resting ventilation and uncovers the Dejours phenomenon in the SD strain.  相似文献   

3.
Although the influence of altitude acclimatization on respiration has been carefully studied, the associated changes in hypoxic and hypercapnic ventilatory responses are the subject of controversy with neither response being previously evaluated during sleep at altitude. Therefore, six healthy males were studied at sea level and on nights 1, 4, and 7 after arrival at altitude (14,110 ft). During wakefulness, ventilation and the ventilatory responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia were determined on each occasion. During both non-rapid-eye-movement and rapid-eye-movement sleep, ventilation, ventilatory pattern, and the hypercapnic ventilatory response (measured at ambient arterial O2 saturation) were determined. There were four primary observations from this study: 1) the hypoxic ventilatory response, although similar to sea level values on arrival at altitude, increased steadily with acclimatization up to 7 days; 2) the slope of the hypercapnic ventilatory response increased on initial exposure to a hypoxic environment (altitude) but did not increase further with acclimatization, although the position of this response shifted steadily to the left (lower PCO2 values); 3) the sleep-induced decrements in both ventilation and hypercapnic responsiveness at altitude were equivalent to those observed at sea level with similar acclimatization occurring during wakefulness and sleep; and 4) the quantity of periodic breathing during sleep at altitude was highly variable and tended to occur more frequently in individuals with higher ventilatory responses to both hypoxia and hypercapnia.  相似文献   

4.
Ventilatory responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia were measured by indirect plethysmography in unanesthetized unrestrained adult rats injected neonatally with capsaicin (50 mg/kg) or vehicle. Such capsaicin treatment ablates a subpopulation of primary afferent fibers containing substance P and various other neuropeptides. Ventilation was measured while the rats breathed air, 12% O2 in N2, 8% O2 in N2, 5% CO2 in O2, or 8% CO2 in O2. Neonatal treatment with capsaicin caused marked alterations in both the magnitude and composition of the hypoxic but not hypercapnic ventilatory response. The increase in minute ventilation evoked by hypoxia in the vehicle-treated rats resulted entirely from an increase in respiratory frequency. In the capsaicin-treated rats the hypoxic ventilatory response was significantly reduced owing to an attenuation of the frequency response. Although both groups responded to hypoxia with a shortening in inspiratory and expiratory times, rats treated with capsaicin displayed less shortening of both respiratory phases. By contrast, hypercapnia induced a brisk ventilatory response in the capsaicin-treated group that was similar in magnitude and pattern to that observed in the vehicle-treated group. Analysis of the components of the hypercapnic ventilatory responses revealed no significant differences between the two groups. We, therefore, conclude that neuropeptide-containing C-fibers are essential for the tachypnic component of the ventilatory response to hypoxia but not hypercapnia.  相似文献   

5.
The purpose of this study was to test whether chronically enhanced O2 delivery to tissues, without arterial hyperoxia, can change acute ventilatory responses to hypercapnia and hypoxia. The effects of decreased hemoglobin (Hb)-O2 affinity on ventilatory responses during hypercapnia (0, 5, 7, and 9% CO2 in O2) and hypoxia (10 and 15% O2 in N2) were assessed in mutant mice expressing Hb Presbyterian (mutation in the beta-globin gene, beta108 Asn --> Lys). O2 consumption during normoxia, measured via open-circuit methods, was significantly higher in the mutant mice than in wild-type mice. Respiratory measurements were conducted with a whole body, unrestrained, single-chamber plethysmograph under conscious conditions. During hypercapnia, there was no difference between the slopes of the hypercapnic ventilatory responses, whereas minute ventilation at the same levels of arterial PCO2 was lower in the Presbyterian mice than in the wild-type mice. During both hypoxic exposures, ventilatory responses were blunted in the mutant mice compared with responses in the wild-type mice. The effects of brief hyperoxia exposure (100% O2) after 10% hypoxia on ventilation were examined in anesthetized, spontaneously breathing mice with a double-chamber plethysmograph. No significant difference was found in ventilatory responses to brief hypoxia between both groups of mice, indicating possible involvement of central mechanisms in blunted ventilatory responses to hypoxia in Presbyterian mice. We conclude that chronically enhanced O2 delivery to peripheral tissues can reduce ventilation during acute hypercapnic and hypoxic exposures.  相似文献   

6.
Possible mechanisms of periodic breathing during sleep   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
To determine the effect of respiratory control system loop gain on periodic breathing during sleep, 10 volunteers were studied during stage 1-2 non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep while breathing room air (room air control), while hypoxic (hypoxia control), and while wearing a tight-fitting mask that augmented control system gain by mechanically increasing the effect of ventilation on arterial O2 saturation (SaO2) (hypoxia increased gain). Ventilatory responses to progressive hypoxia at two steady-state end-tidal PCO2 levels and to progressive hypercapnia at two levels of oxygenation were measured during wakefulness as indexes of controller gain. Under increased gain conditions, five male subjects developed periodic breathing with recurrent cycles of hyperventilation and apnea; the remaining subjects had nonperiodic patterns of hyperventilation. Periodic breathers had greater ventilatory response slopes to hypercapnia under either hyperoxic or hypoxic conditions than nonperiodic breathers (2.98 +/- 0.72 vs. 1.50 +/- 0.39 l.min-1.Torr-1; 4.39 +/- 2.05 vs. 1.72 +/- 0.86 l.min-1.Torr-1; for both, P less than 0.04) and greater ventilatory responsiveness to hypoxia at a PCO2 of 46.5 Torr (2.07 +/- 0.91 vs. 0.87 +/- 0.38 l.min-1.% fall in SaO2(-1); P less than 0.04). To assess whether spontaneous oscillations in ventilation contributed to periodic breathing, power spectrum analysis was used to detect significant cyclic patterns in ventilation during NREM sleep. Oscillations occurred more frequently in periodic breathers, and hypercapnic responses were higher in subjects with oscillations than those without. The results suggest that spontaneous oscillations in ventilation are common during sleep and can be converted to periodic breathing with apnea when loop gain is increased.  相似文献   

7.
In 10 normal young adults, ventilation was evaluated with and without pretreatment with aminophylline, an adenosine blocker, while they breathed pure O2 1) after breathing room air and 2) after 25 min of isocapnic hypoxia (arterial O2 saturation 80%). With and without aminophylline, 5 min of hyperoxia significantly increased inspiratory minute ventilation (VI) from the normoxic base line. In control experiments, with hypoxia, VI initially increased and then declined to levels that were slightly above the normoxic base line. Pretreatment with aminophylline significantly attenuated the hypoxic ventilatory decline. During transitions to pure O2 (cessation of carotid bodies' output), VI and breathing patterns were analyzed breath by breath with a moving-average technique, searching for nadirs before and after hyperoxia. On placebo days, at the end of hypoxia, hyperoxia produced nadirs that were significantly lower than those observed with room-air breathing and also significantly lower than when hyperoxia followed normoxia, averaging, respectively, 6.41 +/- 0.52, 8.07 +/- 0.32, and 8.04 +/- 0.39 (SE) l/min. This hypoxic depression was due to significant decrease in tidal volume and prolongation of expiratory time. Aminophylline partly prevented these alterations in breathing pattern; significant posthypoxic ventilatory depression was not observed. We conclude that aminophylline attenuated hypoxic central depression of ventilation, although it does not affect hyperoxic steady-state hyperventilation. Adenosine may play a modulatory role in hypoxic but not in hyperoxic ventilation.  相似文献   

8.
We sought to determine whether the fa (leptin receptor) mutation was a major determinant of the putative obesity effects on respiratory frequency in an intercross between the Brown Norway (low breathing frequency, nonobese strain) and the Zucker (moderately high breathing frequency, with the fa mutation) strains. The hypothesis was that rats bearing one (heterozygote) or two (homozygote) alleles of the Glu296Pro point mutation (fa) would have a uniformly high respiratory frequency in the second filial (F2) generation, compared with wild-type animals. In addition to breathing frequency, tidal volume and minute ventilation were assessed during baseline, acute hypoxic (10% O2-0% CO2-balance nitrogen), hypercapnic (93% O2-7% CO2), hyperoxic (100% O2-0% CO2), and combined (10% O2-3% CO2-balance nitrogen) challenges in fa homozygote (fa/fa; n = 24), fa heterozygote (fa/wt; n = 33), and wild-type (wt/wt; n = 19) animals. Phenotypes were adjusted with stepwise regression analyses for the effects of age, sex, length, and litter size. Broad-sense heritability was estimated by examining the variance of the traits in first filial and F2 generations. ANOVAs were used to determine the mode of inheritance of the fa allele in the F2 generation. As anticipated, weight demonstrated the greatest overall broad-sense heritability (77%) and was the result of the recessive mutation. Breathing parameters during the hypoxic, hypercapnic, and combined challenges demonstrated a wide range of heritability from 5 to 96%, with a very nonuniform proportion of heritability explained by the leptin receptor. At best, for frequency 4.5 min into the hypercapnic hypoxic challenge, approximately 20% of the total heritability (approximately 67%) could be attributed to an effect of the leptin receptor mutation. We conclude that, unlike its major effect on weight, the effect of the fa allele is not a major gene involved in the regulation of breathing frequency.  相似文献   

9.
10.
Given the environmental forcing by extremes in hypoxia-reoxygenation, there might be no genetic effect on posthypoxic short-term potentiation of ventilation. Minute ventilation (VE), respiratory frequency (f), tidal volume (VT), and the airway resistance during chemical loading were assessed in unanesthetized unrestrained C57BL/6J (B6) and A/J mice using whole body plethysmography. Static pressure-volume curves were also performed. In 12 males for each strain, after 5 min of 8% O2 exposure, B6 mice had a prominent decrease in VE on reoxygenation with either air (-11%) or 100% O2 (-20%), due to the decline of f. In contrast, A/J animals had no ventilatory undershoot or f decline. After 5 min of 3% CO2-10% O2 exposure, B6 exhibited significant decrease in VE (-28.4 vs. -38.7%, air vs. 100% O2) and f (-13.8 vs. -22.3%, air vs. 100% O2) during reoxygenation with both air and 100% O2; however, A/J mice showed significant increase in VE (+116%) and f (+62.2%) during air reoxygenation and significant increase in VE (+68.2%) during 100% O2 reoxygenation. There were no strain differences in dynamic airway resistance during gas challenges or in steady-state total respiratory compliance measured postmortem. Strain differences in ventilatory responses to reoxygenation indicate that genetic mechanisms strongly influence posthypoxic ventilatory behavior.  相似文献   

11.
Somatostatin inhibits the ventilatory response to hypoxia in humans   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The effects of a 90-min infusion of somatostatin (1 mg/h) on ventilation and the ventilatory responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia were studied in six normal adult males. Minute ventilation (VE) was measured with inductance plethysmography, arterial 02 saturation (SaO2) was measured with ear oximetry, and arterial PCO2 (Paco2) was estimated with a transcutaneous CO2 electrode. The steady-state ventilatory response to hypoxia (delta VE/delta SaO2) was measured in subjects breathing 10.5% O2 in an open circuit while isocapnia was maintained by the addition of CO2. The hypercapnic response (delta VE/delta PaCO2) was measured in subjects breathing first 5% and then 7.5% CO2 (in 52-55% O2). Somatostatin greatly attenuated the hypoxic response (control mean -790 ml x min-1.%SaO2 -1, somatostatin mean -120 ml x min-1.%SaO2 -1; P less than 0.01), caused a small fall in resting ventilation (mean % fall - 11%), but did not affect the hypercapnic response. In three of the subjects progressive ventilatory responses (using rebreathing techniques, dry gas meter, and end-tidal Pco2 analysis) and overall metabolism were measured. Somatostatin caused similar changes (mean fall in hypoxic response -73%; no change in hypercapnic response) and did not alter overall O2 consumption nor CO2 production. These results show an hitherto-unsuspected inhibitory potential of this neuropeptide on the control of breathing; the sparing of the hypercapnic response is suggestive of an action on the carotid body but does not exclude a central effect.  相似文献   

12.
Acetazolamide (Acz) is used at altitude to prevent acute mountain sickness, but its effect on exercise capacity under hypoxic conditions is uncertain. Nine healthy men completed this double-blind, randomized, crossover study. All subjects underwent incremental exercise to exhaustion with an inspired O(2) fraction of 0.13, hypoxic ventilatory responses, and hypercapnic ventilatory responses after Acz (500 mg twice daily for 5 doses) and placebo. Maximum power of 203 +/- 38 (SD) W on Acz was less than the placebo value of 225 +/- 40 W (P < 0.01). At peak exercise, arterialized capillary pH was lower and Po(2) higher on Acz (P < 0.01). Ventilation was 118.6 +/- 20.0 l/min at the maximal power on Acz and 102.4 +/- 20.7 l/min at the same power on placebo (P < 0.02), and Borg score for leg fatigue was increased on Acz (P < 0.02), with no difference in Borg score for dyspnea. Hypercapnic ventilatory response on Acz was greater (P < 0.02), whereas hypoxic ventilatory response was unchanged. During hypoxic exercise, Acz reduced exercise capacity associated with increased perception of leg fatigue. Despite increased ventilation, dyspnea was not increased.  相似文献   

13.
We aimed to investigate whether newborn rats respond to acute hypoxia with a biphasic pattern as other newborn species, the characteristics of their ventilatory response to hypercapnia, and the ventilatory response to combined hypoxic and hypercapnic stimuli. First, we established that newborn unanesthetized rats (2-4 days old) exposed to 10% O2 respond as other species. Their ventilation (VE), measured by flow plethysmography, immediately increased by 30%, then dropped and remained around normoxic values within 5 min. The drop was due to a decrease in tidal volume, while frequency remained elevated. Hence, alveolar ventilation was about 10% below normoxic value. At the same time O2 consumption, measured manometrically, dropped (-23%), possibly indicating a mechanism to protect vital organs. Ten percent CO2 in O2 breathing determined a substantial increase in VE (+47%), indicating that the respiratory pump is capable of a marked sustained hyperventilation. When CO2 was added to the hypoxic mixture, VE increased by about 85%, significantly more than without the concurrent hypoxic stimulus. Thus, even during the drop in VE of the biphasic response to hypoxia, the respiratory control system can respond with excitation to a further increase in chemical drive. Analysis of the breathing patterns suggests that in the newborn rat in hypoxia the inspiratory drive is decreased but the inspiratory on-switch mechanism is stimulated, hypercapnia increases ventilation mainly through an increase in respiratory drive, and moderate asphyxia induces the most powerful ventilatory response by combining the stimulatory action of hypercapnia and hypoxia.  相似文献   

14.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the role of peripheral chemoreceptor activity on the hypoxic and hypercapnic ventilatory drives in rabbits with induced hypothyroidism. Experiments were carried out in control and hypothyroid rabbits. Hypothyroidism was induced by an administration of an iodide-blocker, methimazole in food (75 mg/100 g food) for ten weeks. At the end of the tenth week, triiodothyronine (T3) and thyroxine (T4) levels significantly decreased (P<0.001) while thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) increased (P<0.001). Tidal volume (VT), respiratory frequency (f/min), ventilation minute volume (VE) and systemic arterial blood pressure (BP) were recorded during the breathing of the normoxic, hypoxic (8% O2-92% N2) and hypercapnic (6% CO2-Air) gas mixtures, in the anaesthetised rabbits of both groups. At the end of each experimental phase, PaO2, PaCO2, and pHa were measured. The same experimental procedure was repeated after peripheral chemoreceptor denervation in both groups. VT significantly decreased in some of the rabbits with hypothyroidism during the breathing of the hypoxic gas mixture (nonresponsive subgroup) (P<0.05). After chemodenervation, a decrease in VT was observed in this nonresponsive subgroup during normoxia (P<0.05). The percent decrease in VT in nonresponsive subgroup of hypothyroid rabbits after chemodenervation was lower than that of the chemodenervated control animals (P<0.01). When these rabbits with hypothyroidism were allowed to breath the hypercapnic gas mixtures, increases in VT and VE were not significant. In conclusion, although there is a decrease in peripheral chemoreceptor activity in hypothyroidism, it does not seem to be the only cause of decrease in ventilatory drive during hypoxia and hypercapnia.  相似文献   

15.
Acutely lowering ambient O(2) tension increases ventilation in many mammalian species, including humans and mice. Inheritance patterns among kinships and between mouse strains suggest that a robust genetic influence determines individual hypoxic ventilatory responses (HVR). Here, we tested specific genetic hypotheses to describe the inheritance patterns of HVR phenotypes among two inbred mouse strains and their segregant and nonsegregant progeny. Using whole body plethysmography, we assessed the magnitude and pattern of ventilation in C3H/HeJ (C3) and C57BL/6J (B6) progenitor strains at baseline and during acute (3-5 min) hypoxic [mild hypercapnic hypoxia, inspired O(2) fraction (FI(O(2))) = 0.10] and normoxic (mild hypercapnic normoxia, FI(O(2)) = 0.21) inspirate challenges in mild hypercapnia (inspired CO(2) fraction = 0.03). First- and second-filial generations and two backcross progeny were also studied to assess response distributions of HVR phenotypes relative to the parental strains. Although the minute ventilation (VE) during hypoxia was comparable between the parental strains, breathing frequency (f) and tidal volume were significantly different; C3 mice demonstrated a slow, deep HVR relative to a rapid, shallow phenotype of B6 mice. The HVR profile in B6C3F(1)/J mice suggested that this offspring class represented a third phenotype, distinguishable from the parental strains. The distribution of HVR among backcross and intercross offspring suggested that the inheritance patterns for f and VE during mild hypercapnic hypoxia are consistent with models that incorporate two genetic determinants. These results further suggest that the quantitative genetic expression of alleles derived from C3 and B6 parental strains interact to significantly attenuate individual HVR in the first- and second-filial generations. In conclusion, the genetic control of HVR in this model was shown to exhibit a relatively simple genetic basis in terms of respiratory timing characteristics.  相似文献   

16.
After voluntary hyperventilation, normal humans do not develop a significant ventilatory depression despite low arterial CO2 tension, a phenomenon attributed to activation of a brain stem mechanism referred to as the "afterdischarge." Afterdischarge is one of the factors that promote ventilatory stability. It is not known whether physiological stimuli, such as hypoxia, are able to activate the afterdischarge in humans. To test this, breath-by-breath ventilation (VI) was measured in nine young adults during and immediately after a brief period (35-51 s) of acute hypoxia (end-tidal O2 tension 55 Torr). Hypoxia was terminated by switching to 100% O2 (end-tidal O2 tension of first posthypoxic breath greater than 100 Torr). Brief hypoxia increased VI and decreased end-tidal CO2 tension. In all subjects, termination of hypoxia was followed by a gradual ventilatory decay; hyperoxic VI remained higher than the normoxic baseline for several breaths and, despite the negative chemical stimulus of hyperoxia and hypocapnia, reached a new steady state without an apparent undershoot. We conclude that brief hypoxia is able to activate the afterdischarge mechanism in conscious humans. This contrasts sharply with the ventilatory undershoot that follows relief of sustained hypoxia, thereby suggesting that sustained hypoxia inactivates the afterdischarge mechanism. The present findings are of relevance to the pathogenesis of periodic breathing in a hypoxic environment. Furthermore, brief exposure to hypoxia might be useful for evaluation of the role of afterdischarge in other disorders associated with unstable breathing.  相似文献   

17.
In this study we sought to determine the effects of background hyperoxia on the ventilatory response to hypercapnia. We addressed this issue by examining the temporal profile of the first minute transients of minute ventilation, and its frequency and tidal components, in response to 5% and 10% CO2 each co-applied with the natural (balanced with air) and hyperoxic (balanced with O2) levels of oxygen. The study was performed on the urethane-anesthetized, tracheostomized, spontaneously breathing mouse, placed in a flow-through body plethysmograph. We identified an early suppressant effect of CO2-in-O2 on breathing frequency. The frequency declined to 88.5 +/-1.4% and 87.8 +/-1.9% relative to the pre-test, baseline level for 5% and 10% CO2, respectively. There was a compensatory rise in tidal volume and no major change in the overall ventilation. In contrast, CO2-in-Air resulted in ventilatory stimulation caused in equal measure by frequency and tidal components. Thus, the inhibitory effect on breathing frequency of the CO2-in-O2 resulted from the O2 content in the mixture and had the temporal characteristics consistent with carotid body function. In conclusion, transient O2-dependent effects can bear on the nascent hypercapnic ventilatory response. The complexity of the O2-CO2 interaction regarding the breathing pattern components should be taken into account while designing the optimal conditions for a hypercapnic test.  相似文献   

18.
Periodic breathing (PB) is a fundamental breathing pattern in many common cardiopulmonary illnesses. The finding of PB in C57BL/6J (B6) mice was previously ascribed to strain differences in posthypoxic ventilatory and frequency decline in the B6 mice (Han F, Subramanian S, Price ER, Nadeau J, and Strohl KP. J Appl Physiol 92: 1133-1140, 2002). We tested whether the induction of posthypoxic frequency decline in A/J mice, through administration of a neuronal nitric oxide synthase blocker [7-nitroindazole (7-NI); 60 mg/kg], would cause A/J mice to exhibit PB and/or alter PB expression in the B6 strain. Recordings of ventilatory behavior by the plethysmography method were made when unanesthetized B6 (n = 10) or A/J (n = 6) animals were reoxygenated with 100% O2 or room air after exposure to 8% O2. Before undergoing gas challenges, mice were given an intraperitoneal injection of either peanut oil alone (vehicle) or 7-NI suspended in peanut oil. Compared with vehicle, both strains of mice exhibited posthypoxic frequency decline and the absence of short-term potentiation with 7-NI administration. B6 mice continued to exhibit posthypoxic PB; however, the PB was characterized by longer cycle and apnea length. In contrast, A/J mice did not show increased tendency toward posthypoxic PB with 7-NI. We conclude that 7-NI further differentiates the A/J and B6 strains in terms of PB and that strain-related differences in posthypoxic frequency decline are not primary determinants of this strain difference in the occurrence of PB. Metabolism was not associated with either the expression of posthypoxic ventilatory decline or PB. Furthermore, neuronal nitric oxide may be an organizing feature in the presence, length, and/or cycle length of apnea in the susceptible strain.  相似文献   

19.
We hypothesized that, in male rats, 10% fructose in drinking water would depress ventilatory responsiveness to acute hypoxia (10% O2 in N2) and hypercapnia (5% CO2 in O2) that would be depressed further by exposure to intermittent hypoxia. Minute ventilation (Ve) in air and in response to acute hypoxia and hypercapnia was evaluated in 10 rats before fructose feeding (FF), during 6 wk of FF, and after FF was removed for 2 wk. During FF, five rats were exposed to intermittent air and five to intermittent hypoxia for 13 days. Six rats given tap water acted as control and were exposed to intermittent air and subsequently intermittent hypoxia. In FF rats, plasma insulin levels increased threefold in the rats exposed to intermittent hypoxia and during washout returned to levels observed in rats exposed to intermittent air. During FF, ventilatory responsiveness to acute hypoxia was depressed because of decreased tidal volume (Vt) responsiveness. During washout, Ve decreased as a result of decreased Vt and frequency of breathing, and the ventilatory responsiveness to hypoxia in intermittent hypoxia rats did not recover. In all rats, the ventilatory responses to hypercapnia were decreased during FF and recovered after washout because of an increased Vt responsiveness. In the control group, hypoxic responsiveness was not depressed after intermittent hypoxia and was augmented after washout. Thus FF attenuated the ventilatory responsiveness of conscious rats to hypoxia and hypercapnia. Intermittent hypoxia interacted with FF to increase insulin levels and depress ventilatory responses to acute hypoxia that remained depressed during washout.  相似文献   

20.
Tidal volume, respiratory frequency, and minute volume were measured with total body plethysmography. Both hypercapnic (0-7% CO2) and hypoxic (13-21% O2) gas mixtures caused "dose" related hyperventilation in the hamsters. However, there was no synergism between combined stimuli. Rats exhibited greater hyperventilation than the hamsters during hypercapnic + hypoxic and hypercapnic exposures. Hamsters responded more than the rats to hypoxia alone. Greater blood buffering capacity of hamsters is a possible explanation for the species differences in ventilatory sensitivity.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号