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1.
The objective of the present study was to test the hypothesis that in neonatal piglets there would be no hypoventilation after sham denervation or aortic denervation (AOD) alone, but there would be transient hypoventilation after carotid body denervation (CBD) and the hypoventilation would be greatest after combined carotid and aortic denervation (CBD+AOD). There was a significant (P < 0.05) hypoventilation in CBD and CBD+AOD piglets denervated at 5, 15, and 25 days of age. The hypoventilation in CBD+AOD piglets denervated at 5 days of age was greater (P < 0.05) than that of all other groups. Conversely, sham-denervated and AOD piglets did not hypoventilate after denervation. Injections of sodium cyanide showed that aortic chemoreceptors were a site of recovery of peripheral chemosensitivity after CBD. This aortic sodium cyanide response was abolished by prior injection of a serotonin 5a receptor blocker. Residual peripheral chemosensitivity after CBD+AOD was localized to the left ventricle. We conclude that 1) aortic chemoreceptors contribute to eupneic breathing in piglets that were carotid denervated at 5 days of age and 2) there are multiple sites of residual peripheral chemosensitivity after CBD.  相似文献   

2.
Carotid body denervation (CBD) in neonatal goats and piglets results in minimal irregular breathing and no fatalities. Redundancy and/or plasticity of peripheral chemosensitivity and a relatively mature ventilatory control system at birth may contribute to the paucity of CBD effects in these species. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that CBD mortality would be greater in neonates of a less mature species such as the rat. We found that the mortality in rats denervated at 2-3 and 7-8 days of age was significantly higher (P < 0.05) than in sham-CBD rats. In all surviving rats, pulmonary ventilation during hypoxia was lower in CBD than in sham operated rats 2 days after denervation. In surviving rats denervated during the 7th and 8th postnatal days, there was also reduced weight gain and pulmonary ventilation during eupnea, including apneas up to 20 s in duration. However, the effects of CBD were compensated within 3 wk after denervation. Local injections of NaCN indicated that aortic chemoreceptors might have been one of the sites of recovery of peripheral chemosensitivity. We concluded that CBD has higher mortality in newborn rats than in other mammals, possibly because of the relative immaturity of these animals at birth. Nonetheless, in survivors there was enough redundancy and plasticity in the control of breathing to eventually compensate for the consequences of CBD.  相似文献   

3.
We examined the effects of carotid body denervation (CX, n = 9), CX + aortic nerve section (CAX, n = 9), and sham surgery (SHAM, n = 7) on cardiorespiratory and metabolic function in young piglets (less than 9 days). For comparison, 1-mo-old pigs were also studied. Studies were performed 1 day after surgery, during which time ventilation (barometric plethysmography), heart rate, blood pressure, arterial blood gases, and electroencephalogram were recorded under normoxia. CX and CAX piglets hypoventilated (arterial PCO2 = 47.1 +/- 2.6 and 45.4 +/- 3.1 Torr, respectively) compared with SHAM piglets (arterial PCO2 = 36.4 +/- 1.5 Torr). CX piglets had an average of 8.0 +/- 3.0 apneas/h, lasting, on average, 26 +/- 3 s. CAX piglets averaged 17.2 +/- 7.9 apneas/h, lasting 30 +/- 5 s. Such long apneas were never observed in SHAM animals. Mean heart rate and blood pressure in denervated piglets were not significantly different from those in SHAM piglets. In animals followed up poststudy, significantly high mortality was observed in CX (5 of 9) and CAX (6 of 9) piglets by 7 days after surgery but not in SHAM animals (0 of 7) despite identical environmental and feed conditions (P less than 0.05; chi 2). One-month-old denervated animals showed periodic breathing and hypoventilation, but none died. These results suggest that in the newborn piglet 1) peripheral chemoreceptors have an active role in maintaining normal ventilation and avoidance of prolonged apnea and 2) survivability in early life is critically dependent on peripheral chemoreceptors.  相似文献   

4.
The objective of the present study was to determine in goats whether carotid body denervation (CBD) at 1-3 days of age causes permanent changes in breathing greater than those that occur after CBD in adult goats. Goats underwent CBD (n = 6) or sham CBD (n = 3) surgery at 1-3 days of age. In addition, one unoperated control animal was studied. Bolus intravenous injections of NaCN 2 days postsurgery verified successful CBD surgery. However, at 3, 11, and 18 mo of age, the CBD goats had regained a NaCN response that did not differ (P > 0.10) from that of intact goats. Intracarotid NaCN injections elicited a hyperpnea in the sham CBD but not the CBD goats. Only one animal exhibited highly irregular breathing [characterized by prolonged (>9-s) apneas] after CBD, and the irregularity disappeared by 3 mo of age. One CBD goat died at 35 days of age, and autopsy revealed that death was associated with pneumonia. After 3 mo of age, there were no statistically significant differences (P > 0.10) between sham and CBD goats in eupneic breathing, hypoxia and CO(2) sensitivity, and the exercise hyperpnea. It is, therefore, concluded that CBD at 1-3 days of age in goats does not appear to affect selected aspects of respiratory control after 3 mo of age, conceivably because of the emergence of other functional chemoreceptors that compensate for the loss of the carotid chemoreceptor.  相似文献   

5.
Important role of carotid afferents in control of breathing   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
The purpose of the present study was todetermine the effect on breathing in the awake state of carotid bodydenervation (CBD) over 1-2 wk after denervation. Studies werecompleted on adult goats repeatedly before and1) for 15 days after bilateral CBD (n = 8),2) for 7 days after unilateral CBD(n = 5), and3) for 15 days after sham CBD(n = 3). Absence of ventilatorystimulation when NaCN was injected directly into a common carotidartery confirmed CBD. There was a significant(P < 0.01) hypoventilation during the breathing of room air after unilateral and bilateral CBD. Themaximum PaCO2 increase (8 Torr forunilateral and 11 Torr for bilateral) occurred ~4 days afterCBD. This maximum was transient because by 7 (unilateral)to 15 (bilateral) days after CBD, PaCO2 was only 3-4 Torr above control.CO2 sensitivity was attenuated from control by 60% on day 4 afterbilateral CBD and by 35% on day 4 after unilateral CBD. This attenuation was transient, because CO2 sensitivity returned tocontrol temporally similar to the return ofPaCO2 during the breathing of room air.During mild and moderate treadmill exercise 1-8 days afterbilateral CBD, PaCO2 was unchanged fromits elevated level at rest, but, 10-15 days after CBD,PaCO2 decreased slightly from restduring exercise. These data indicate that1) carotid afferents are animportant determinant of rest and exercise breathing and ventilatoryCO2 sensitivity, and2) apparent plasticity within theventilatory control system eventually provides compensation for chronicloss of these afferents.

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6.
We determined the effects of denervating the hilar branches (HND) of the vagus nerves on breathing and arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) in awake ponies during eupnea and when inspired PCO2 (PICO2) was increased to 14, 28, and 42 Torr. In five carotid chemoreceptor-intact ponies, breathing frequency (f) was less, whereas tidal volume (VT), inspiratory time (TI), and ratio of TI to total cycle time (TT) were greater 2-4 wk after HND than before HND. HND per se did not significantly affect PaCO2 at any level of PICO2, and the minute ventilation (VE)-PaCO2 response curve was not significantly altered by HND. Finally, the attenuation of a thermal tachypnea by elevated PICO2 was not altered by HND. Accordingly, in carotid chemoreceptor-intact ponies, the only HND effect on breathing was the change in pattern classically observed with attenuated lung volume feedback. There was no evidence suggestive of a PCO2-H+ sensory mechanism influencing VE, f, VT, or PaCO2. In ponies that had the carotid chemoreceptors denervated (CBD) 3 yr earlier, HND also decreased f, increased VT, TI, and TT, but did not alter the slope of the VE-PaCO2 response curve. However, at all levels of elevated PICO2, the arterial hypercapnia that had persistently been attenuated, since CBD was restored to normal by HND. The data suggest that during CO2 inhalation in CBD ponies a hilar-innervated mechanism influences PaCO2 by reducing physiological dead space to increase alveolar ventilation.  相似文献   

7.
Increases in brain stem blood flow (BBF) during hypoxia may decrease tissue PCO2/[H+], causing minute ventilation (VE) to decrease. To determine whether an increase in BBF, isolated from changes in arterial PO2 and PCO2, can affect respiration, we obstructed the thoracic aorta with a balloon in 31 intact and 24 peripherally chemobarodenervated, anesthetized, spontaneously breathing newborn piglets. Continuous measurements of cardiorespiratory variables were made before and during 2 min of aortic obstruction. Radiolabeled microspheres were used to measure BBF before and approximately 30 s after balloon inflation in eight intact and five denervated animals. After balloon inflation, there was a rapid increase in mean blood pressure in both the intact and denervated animals, followed within 10 s by a decrease in tidal volume and VE. In the intact animals, the decrease in VE after acute hypertension can be ascribed to a baroreceptor-mediated reflex. After peripheral chemobarodenervation, however, acute hypertension continued to produce a decrease in VE, which cannot be explained by baroreceptor stimulation. In these denervated animals, aortic balloon inflation was associated with an increase in BBF (13.1 +/- 2.7%; P less than 0.05). We speculate that the increase in BBF during hypoxia may contribute to the decrease in ventilation observed after carotid body denervation.  相似文献   

8.
We determined the effect of acute hypoxia on the ventilatory (VE) and electromyogram (EMG) responses of inspiratory (diaphragm) and expiratory (transversus abdominis) muscles in awake spontaneously breathing ponies. Eleven carotid body-intact (CBI) and six chronic carotid body-denervated (CBD) ponies were studied during normoxia (fractional inspired O2 concn [FIO2] = 0.21) and two levels of hypoxia (FIO2 approximately 0.15 and 0.12; 6-10 min/period). Four CBI and five CBD ponies were also hilar nerve (pulmonary vagal) denervated. Mean VE responses to hypoxia were greater in CBI ponies (delta arterial PCO2 = -4 and -7 Torr in CBI during hypoxic periods; -1 and -2 Torr in CBD). Hypoxia increased the rate of rise and mean activity of integrated diaphragm EMG in CBI (P less than 0.05) and CBD (P greater than 0.05) ponies relative to normoxia. Duration of diaphragm activity was reduced in CBI (P less than 0.05) but unchanged in CBD ponies. During hypoxia in both groups of ponies, total and mean activities per breath of transversus abdominis were reduced (P less than 0.05) without a decrease in rate of rise in activity. Time to peak and total duration of transversus abdominis activity were markedly reduced by hypoxia in CBI and CBD ponies (P less than 0.05). Hilar nerve denervation did not alter the EMG responses to hypoxia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
The contribution of the carotid body chemoreceptor to postnatal maturation of breathing was evaluated in lambs from 7 to 70 days of age. The study was conducted by comparing the eupneic ventilation and resting pneumograms in intact conscious lambs with those of lambs that were carotid body chemodenervated (CBD) at birth. In comparison to the 1-wk-old intact lambs, the CBD lambs had significant decreases in minute ventilation (VE, 313 vs. 517 ml/kg), tidal volume (VT, 7.2 vs. 10.5 ml/kg), respiratory rate (f, 44 vs. 51 breaths/min), and occlusion pressure (P0.1, 2.8 vs. 7.2 cmH2O). Arterial PO2's were 59 vs. 75 Torr (P less than 0.05) and arterial PCO2's 47 vs. 36 Torr (P less than 0.05), respectively, in CBD and intact lambs. In intact lambs from 7 to 70 days, resting VE decreased progressively from 517 to 274 ml/kg (P less than 0.01) due to a fall in VT, mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI), and f, whereas the ratio of inspiratory time to total breath duration remained constant. P0.1 decreased from 7.2 to 3.9 cmH2O from 7 to 42 days. In contrast the CBD lambs experienced only minimal changes in VE, VT, VT/TI, and f during the same period. VE only decreased from 313 to 218 and P0.1 from 2.8 to 2.4 cmH2O. In contrast to that of intact lambs the resting pneumogram of CBD lambs remained relatively fixed from 7 to 70 days. Three CBD lambs died unexpectedly, without apparent cause, in the 4th and 5th wk of life.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
We assessed the time course of changes in eupneic arterial PCO(2) (Pa(CO(2))) and the ventilatory response to hyperoxic rebreathing after removal of the carotid bodies (CBX) in awake female dogs. Elimination of the ventilatory response to bolus intravenous injections of NaCN was used to confirm CBX status on each day of data collection. Relative to eupneic control (Pa(CO(2)) = 40 +/- 3 Torr), all seven dogs hypoventilated after CBX, reaching a maximum Pa(CO(2)) of 53 +/- 6 Torr by day 3 post-CBX. There was no significant recovery of eupneic Pa(CO(2)) over the ensuing 18 days. Relative to control, the hyperoxic CO(2) ventilatory (change in inspired minute ventilation/change in end-tidal PCO(2)) and tidal volume (change in tidal volume/ change in end-tidal PCO(2)) response slopes were decreased 40 +/- 15 and 35 +/- 20% by day 2 post-CBX. There was no recovery in the ventilatory or tidal volume response slopes to hyperoxic hypercapnia over the ensuing 19 days. We conclude that 1) the carotid bodies contribute approximately 40% of the eupneic drive to breathe and the ventilatory response to hyperoxic hypercapnia and 2) there is no recovery in the eupneic drive to breathe or the ventilatory response to hyperoxic hypercapnia after removal of the carotid chemoreceptors, indicating a lack of central or aortic chemoreceptor plasticity in the adult dog after CBX.  相似文献   

11.
The present study was designed to provide further insight into the role of the carotid and aortic chemoreceptors in ventilatory (VE) acclimatization during sojourn at altitude. Measurements were made: 1) on 10 ponies near sea level (SL, 740 Torr) under normal conditions, 2) on 6 of these at SL following chemoreceptor denervation (CD), and 3) subsequently on all 10 during 4 days of hypobaric hypoxia (PaO2 = 40-47 Torr). CD resulteo in hypoventilation at SL (deltaPaCO2 = d8 Torr, P less than 0.05), and it prevented hyperventilation normally observed with injection of NaCN and acute exposure to hypoxia (less than 1 h). In contrast, hyperventilation was evident in normal ponies during acute hypoxia (deltaPaCO2 = -6.7 Torr). Ventilation increased in both groups between the 2nd and 8th h of hypoxia (deltaPaCO2 from 1 h = -4 Torr, P less than 0.05). This change, a common characteristic of acclimatization, persisted throughout 4 days of hypoxia in the normal ponies. However, in the CD ponies this change was evident consistently only through the 12th h and after the 44 h hyperventilation was no longer evident. We conclude that the peripheral chemoreceptors are essential in ponies for normal VE acclimatization to this degree of hypoxemia. Two additional findings in CD ponies suggest the presence of a CNS inhibitory influence on the VE control center during chronic hypoxemia. First, acute hyperoxygenation on the 4th day of hypoxemia induced hyperventilation (deltaPaCO2 = -5 Torr, P less than 0.05). Second, again on the 4th day and during hyperoxygenation, VE responsiveness to CO2 and doxapram HCl was greater than at sea level.  相似文献   

12.
Carotid body-denervated (CBD) ponies have a less than normal increase in arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) when inspired CO2 (PICO2) is increased, even when pulmonary ventilation (VE) and breathing frequency (f) are normal. We studied six tracheostomized ponies to determine whether this change 1) might be due to increased alveolar ventilation (VA) secondary to a reduction in upper airway dead space (VD) or 2) is dependent on an upper airway sensory mechanism. Three normal and three chronic CBD ponies were studied while they were breathing room air and at 14, 28, and 42 Torr PICO2. While the ponies were breathing room air, physiological VD was 483 and 255 ml during nares breathing (NBr) and tracheostomy breathing (TBr), respectively. However, at elevated PICO2, mixed expired PCO2 often exceeded PaCO2; thus we were unable to calculate physiological VD using the Bohr equation. At all PICO2 in normal ponies, PaCO2 was approximately 0.3 Torr greater during NBr than during TBr (P less than 0.05). In CBD ponies this NBr-TBr difference was only evident while breathing room air and at 28 Torr PICO2. At each elevated PICO2 during both NBr and TBr, the increase in PaCO2 above control was always less in CBD ponies than in normal ponies (P less than 0.01). The VE-PaCO2, f-PaCO2, and tidal volume-PaCO2 relationships did not differ between NBr and TBr (P greater than 0.10) nor did they differ between normal and CBD ponies (P greater than 0.10). We conclude that the attenuated increase in PaCO2 during CO2 inhalation after CBD is not due to a relative increase in VA secondary to reducing upper airway VD.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
We assessed the consequences of respiratory unloading associated with tracheostomy breathing (TBr). Three normal and three carotid body-denervated (CBD) ponies were prepared with chronic tracheostomies that at rest reduced physiological dead space (VD) from 483 +/- 60 to 255 +/- 30 ml and lung resistance from 1.5 +/- 0.14 to 0.5 +/- 0.07 cmH2O . l-1 . s. At rest and during steady-state mild-to-heavy exercise arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) was approximately 1 Torr higher during nares breathing (NBr) than during TBr. Pulmonary ventilation and tidal volume (VT) were greater and alveolar ventilation was less during NBr than TBr. Breathing frequency (f) did not differ between NBr and TBr at rest, but f during exercise was greater during TBr than during NBr. These responses did not differ between normal and CBD ponies. We also assessed the consequences of increasing external VD (300 ml) and resistance (R, 0.3 cmH2O . l-1 . s) by breathing through a tube. At rest and during mild exercise tube breathing caused PaCO2 to transiently increase 2-3 Torr, but 3-5 min later PaCO2 usually was within 1 Torr of control. Tube breathing did not cause f to change. When external R was increased 1 cmH2O . l-1 . s by breathing through a conventional air collection system, f did not change at rest, but during exercise f was lower than during unencumbered breathing. These responses did not differ between normal, CBD, and hilar nerve-denervated ponies, and they did not differ when external VD or R were added at either the nares or tracheostomy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
We determined the effects of carotid body excision (CBX) on eupneic ventilation and the ventilatory responses to acute hypoxia, hyperoxia, and chronic hypoxia in unanesthetized rats. Arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) and calculated minute alveolar ventilation to minute metabolic CO2 production (VA/VCO2) ratio were used to determine the ventilatory responses. The effects of CBX and sham operation were compared with intact controls (PaCO2 = 40.0 +/- 0.1 Torr, mean +/- 95% confidence limits, and VA/VCO2 = 21.6 +/- 0.1). CBX rats showed 1) chronic hypoventilation with respiratory acidosis, which was maintained for at least 75 days after surgery (PaCO2 = 48.4 +/- 1.1 Torr and VA/VCO2 = 17.9 +/- 0.4), 2) hyperventilation in response to acute hyperoxia vs. hypoventilation in intact rats, 3) an attenuated increase in VA/VCO2 in acute hypoxemia (arterial PO2 approximately equal to 49 Torr), which was 31% of the 8.7 +/- 0.3 increase in VA/VCO2 observed in control rats, 4) no ventilatory acclimatization between 1 and 24 h hypoxia, whereas intact rats had a further 7.5 +/- 1.5 increase in VA/VCO2, 5) a decreased PaCO2 upon acute restoration of normoxia after 24 h hypoxia in contrast to an increased PaCO2 in controls. We conclude that in rats carotid body chemoreceptors are essential to maintain normal eupneic ventilation and to the process of ventilatory acclimatization to chronic hypoxia.  相似文献   

15.
Seven ponies were subjected to carotid body denervation (CD) and two ponies were sham operated (S). Measurement of arterial blood gases and arterial blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) acid-base balance were made prior to and 1,2,4,9, and 17 wks after surgery in unanesthetized animals. Resting ventilation and ventilatory responsiveness to hypoxia and NaCN infusion were assessed prior to and 2,9, and 17 wks after surgery. Alveolar hypoventilation in the CD ponies was marked 1-2 wk after surgery when VE and VA were reduced 40% and 10%, respectively, from control and PaCO2 was 12-15 mmHg above control. However, the effect was not nearly as great 4, 9, and 17 wk after surgery when the PaCO2 stabilized at approximately 6 mmHg above control PaCO2. Arterial blood pH was normal in the hypercapnic CD ponies, but CSF pH remained acid relative to normal throughout the 17-wk period. Changes in ventilatory responsiveness to hypoxia and NaCN tended to parallel changes in resting ventilation. These findings suggest: 1) the carotid bodies are essential in ponies to maintain normal ventilation: 2) in CD ponies peripheral chemosensitivity is partially regained at some unestablished locus; and 3) pH compensating mechanisms in chronically hypercapnic ponies function relatively better in blood than in CSF.  相似文献   

16.
The essential role of carotid body chemoreceptors in sleep apnea   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Sleep apnea is attributable, in part, to an unstable ventilatory control system and specifically to a narrowed "CO2 reserve" (i.e., the difference in P(a)CO2 between eupnea and the apneic threshold). Findings from sleeping animal preparations with denervated carotid chemoreceptors or vascularly isolated, perfused carotid chemoreceptors demonstrate the critical importance of peripheral chemoreceptors to the ventilatory responses to dynamic changes in P(a)CO2. Specifically, (i) carotid body denervation prevented the apnea and periodic breathing that normally follow transient ventilatory overshoots; (ii) the CO2 reserve for peripheral chemoreceptors was about one half that for brain chemoreceptors; and (iii) hypocapnia isolated to the carotid chemoreceptors caused hypoventilation that persisted over time despite a concomitant, progressive brain respiratory acidosis. Observations in both humans and animals are cited to demonstrate the marked plasticity of the CO2 reserve and, therefore, the propensity for apneas and periodic breathing, in response to changing background ventilatory stimuli.  相似文献   

17.
Our study was concerned with the effect of brain hypoxia on cardiorespiratory control in the sleeping dog. Eleven unanesthetized dogs were studied; seven were prepared for vascular isolation and extracorporeal perfusion of the carotid body to assess the effects of systemic [and, therefore, central nervous system (CNS)] hypoxia (arterial PO(2) = 52, 45, and 38 Torr) in the presence of a normocapnic, normoxic, and normohydric carotid body during non-rapid eye movement sleep. A lack of ventilatory response to systemic boluses of sodium cyanide during carotid body perfusion demonstrated isolation of the perfused carotid body and lack of other significant peripheral chemosensitivity. Four additional dogs were carotid body denervated and exposed to whole body hypoxia for comparison. In the sleeping dog with an intact and perfused carotid body exposed to specific CNS hypoxia, we found the following. 1) CNS hypoxia for 5-25 min resulted in modest but significant hyperventilation and hypocapnia (minute ventilation increased 29 +/- 7% at arterial PO(2) = 38 Torr); carotid body-denervated dogs showed no ventilatory response to hypoxia. 2) The hyperventilation was caused by increased breathing frequency. 3) The hyperventilatory response developed rapidly (<30 s). 4) Most dogs maintained hyperventilation for up to 25 min of hypoxic exposure. 5) There were no significant changes in blood pressure or heart rate. We conclude that specific CNS hypoxia, in the presence of an intact carotid body maintained normoxic and normocapnic, does not depress and usually stimulates breathing during non-rapid eye movement sleep. The rapidity of the response suggests a chemoreflex meditated by hypoxia-sensitive respiratory-related neurons in the CNS.  相似文献   

18.
Our aim was to determine the effects of carotid body denervation (CBD) on the ventilatory responses to focal acidosis and ibotenic acid (IA) injections into the medullary raphe area of awake, adult goats. Multiple microtubules were chronically implanted into the midline raphe area nuclei either before or after CBD. For up to 15 days after bilateral CBD, arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) (13.3 +/- 1.9 Torr) was increased (P < 0.001), and CO2 sensitivity (-53.0 +/- 6.4%) was decreased (P <0.001). Thereafter, resting PaCO2 and CO2 sensitivity returned (P <0.01) toward control, but PaCO2 remained elevated (4.8 +/- 1.9 Torr) and CO2 sensitivity reduced (-24.7 +/- 6.0%) > or =40 days after CBD. Focal acidosis (FA) at multiple medullary raphe area sites 23-44 days post-CBD with 50 or 80% CO(2) increased inspiratory flow (Vi), tidal volume (Vt), metabolic rate (VO2), and heart rate (HR) (P <0.05). The effects of FA with 50% CO2 after CBD did not differ from intact goats. However, CBD attenuated (P <0.05) the increase in Vi, Vt, and HR with 80% CO2, but it had no effect on the increase in VO2. Rostral but not caudal raphe area IA injections increased Vi, BP, and HR (P < 0.05), and these responses were accentuated (P <0.001) after CBD. CO2 sensitivity was attenuated (-20%; P <0.05) <7 days after IA injection, but thereafter it returned to prelesion values in CBD goats. We conclude the following: 1) the attenuated response to FA after CBD provides further evidence that the carotid bodies provide a tonic facilitory input into respiratory control centers, 2) the plasticity after CBD is not due to increased raphe chemoreceptor sensitivity, and 3) the "error-sensing" function of the carotid body blunts the effect of strong stimulation of the raphe.  相似文献   

19.
Breathing, diaphragmatic and transversus abdominis electromyograms (EMGdi and EMGta, respectively), and arterial blood gases were studied during normoxia (arterial PO2 = 95 Torr) and 48 h of hypoxia (arterial PO2 = 40-50 Torr) in intact (n = 11) and carotid body-denervated (CBD, n = 9) awake ponies. In intact ponies, arterial PCO2 was 7, 5, 9, and 11 Torr below control (P less than 0.01) at 1 and 10 min and 5 and 24-48 h of hypoxia, respectively. In CBD ponies, arterial PCO2 was 3-4 Torr below control (P less than 0.01) at 4, 5, 6, and 24 h of hypoxia. In intact ponies, pulmonary ventilation, mean inspiratory flow rate, and rate of rise of EMGdi and EMGta changed in a multi-phasic fashion during hypoxia; each reached a maximum during the 1st h (P less than 0.05), declined between 1 and 5 h (P less than 0.05), and increased between 5 and 24-48 h of hypoxia. As a result of the increased drive to the diaphragm, the mean EMGdi was above control throughout hypoxia (P less than 0.05). In contrast, as a result of a sustained reduction in duration of the EMGta, the mean EMGta was below control for most of the hypoxic period. In CBD ponies, pulmonary ventilation and mean inspiratory flow rate did not change during chronic hypoxia (P greater than 0.10). In these ponies, the rate of rise of the EMGdi was less than control (P less than 0.05) for most of the hypoxic period, which resulted in the mean EMGdi to also be less than control (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

20.
The role of the peripheral chemoreceptors in the control of fetal breathing movements has not been fully defined. To determine whether denervation of the peripheral chemoreceptors affects fetal breathing movements, we studied 14 chronically catheterized fetal sheep from 120 to 138 days of gestation. In seven fetuses the chemoreceptors were denervated by bilateral section of the vagus and carotid sinus nerves; in seven others, sham operations were performed. We compared several variables during two study periods: 0-5 and 6-13 days after operation. In the denervated fetuses there were significant decreases in the incidence and amplitude of fetal breathing movements during both study periods. There were no differences between the two groups in incidence of low-voltage electrocortical activity, arterial pH and blood gas tensions, fetal heart rate, mean arterial blood pressure, or duration of survival after operation or birth weight. We conclude that denervation of the peripheral chemoreceptors decreases fetal breathing movements. These results indicate that the peripheral chemoreceptors are active during fetal life and participate in the control of fetal breathing movements.  相似文献   

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