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1.
The influence of cardiovascular changes on ventilation has been demonstrated in adult animals and humans (Jones, French, Weissman & Wasserman, 1981; Wasserman, Whipp & Castagna 1974). It has been suggested that neonatal hypoxic ventilatory depression may be related to some of the hemodynamic changes that occur during hypoxia (Brown & Lawson, 1988; Darnall, 1985; Suguihara, Bancalari, Bancalari, Hehre & Gerhardt, 1986). To test the possible relationship between the cardiovascular and ventilatory response to hypoxia in the newborn, eleven sedated spontaneously breathing piglets (age: 5.9 +/- 1.6 days; weight: 1795 +/- 317 g; SD) were studied before and after alpha adrenergic blockade with phenoxybenzamine. Minute ventilation (VE) was measured with a pneumotachograph, cardiac output (CO) by thermodilution and total and regional brain blood flow (BBF) with radiolabeled microspheres. Measurements were performed while the animals were breathing room air and after 10 min of hypoxia induced by breathing 10% O2. Hypoxia was again induced one hour after infusion of phenoxybenzamine (6 mg/kg over 30 min). After 10 min of hypoxia, in the absence of phenoxybenzamine, the animals responded with marked increases in VE (P less than 0.001), CO (P less than 0.001), BBF, and brain stem blood flow (BSBF) (P less than 0.02). However, the normal hemodynamic response to hypoxia was eliminated after alpha adrenergic blockade. There were significant decreases in systemic arterial blood pressure, CO, and BBF during hypoxia after phenoxybenzamine infusion; nevertheless, VE increased significantly (P less than 0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
We examined the effect of a dynamic, hypoxic stimulus upon the reflex respiratory responses of 15, conscious rat pups on post-natal days 5-7 in order to ascertain the influence of a non-adapting peripheral chemoreceptor discharge upon respiratory control during hypoxia in the newborn. Respiration was measured as integrated airflow into and out of a body plethysmograph. The respiratory response to 6 minutes of a 16-breath cycle (approximately 5 s) in FiO2 between 0.21 and 0.10 (alternating hypoxia) was compared with the response to 6 min of a constant FiO2 of 0.12 (non-alternating hypoxia). Ventilation increased significantly from a control level of 0.12 +/- 0.02 ml/s (mean +/- SEM) to 0.18 +/- 0.02 and 0.17 +/- 0.02 ml/s in non-alternating and alternating hypoxia runs respectively during the first minute (phase 1) of each run, after which ventilation in both run types fell progressively and significantly back towards control levels to reach, by the sixth minute (phase 2), 0.13 +/- 0.01 and 0.12 +/- 0.02 ml/s respectively. No significant difference was found between the levels of ventilation in non-alternating hypoxia and alternating hypoxia during either phase 1 (P greater than 0.10) or phase 2 (P greater than 0.60). No significant alternation was found in any respiratory variable at the frequency of the 16-breath hypoxic cycle during either phase 1 or phase 2 of non-alternating hypoxia. However, a significant alternation, at this frequency, of 37 +/- 6% (P less than 0.05 compared to control) was found in ventilation during phase 1 of alternating hypoxia which was further increased to 62 +/- 8% (P less than 0.05 compared to phase 1) during phase 2. In phase 1 the alternation was due primarily to significant alternation in inspiratory time whilst in phase 2 significant alternation also occurred in tidal volume, expiratory time and mean inspiratory flow. Our results show that the magnitude of hypoxic ventilatory depression (HVD) in the newborn is not affected by an alternating hypoxic stimulus and that, during phase 2, ventilation can still be stimulated by peripheral chemoreceptors. We suggest that peripheral chemoreceptor adaptation is unlikely to be a major cause of HVD in the newborn rat and that the magnitude of HVD is, in part, the result of a competitive interaction between peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation and a centrally-mediated inhibitory action of hypoxia.  相似文献   

3.
The relative contributions of breathing frequency and tidal volume to the increase in ventilation during acute or prolonged exposure to hypoxia is uncertain. We examined the changes in breathing pattern during hypoxic exposures lasting minutes, hours, and days using data from previous studies. Increased tidal volume accounted for the increased ventilation during 7-10 and 30 min of isocapnic and poikilocapnic (no CO2 added) hypoxic exposures as well as during 7 h of poikilocapnic hypobaric hypoxia (4,800 m). Tidal volume was also a greater overall contributor than frequency to increased ventilation in sea-level residents during 3 days of isocapnic hypobaric hypoxia (4,100-4,600 m) and in Denver (1,600 m) residents during 5 days on Pikes Peak (4,300 m). In sea-level residents during 3 days of poikilocapnic hypobaric hypoxia (3,600-4,300 m) and during 7-8 days on Pikes Peak, increased frequency accounted for the rise in ventilation. Tidal volume thus contributed more than frequency to increasing ventilation during brief hypoxia, whereas the contribution of frequency was increased in prolonged hypoxia involving a 4,300-m altitude ascent and hypocapnia.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
The effect of oral caffeine on resting ventilation (VE), ventilatory responsiveness to progressive hyperoxic hypercapnia (HCVR), isocapnic hypoxia (HVR), and moderate exercise (EVR) below the anaerobic threshold (AT) was examined in seven healthy adults. Ventilatory responses were measured under three conditions: control (C) and after ingestion of either 650 mg caffeine (CF) or placebo (P) in a double-blind randomized manner. None of the physiological variables of interest differed significantly for C and P conditions (P greater than 0.05). Caffeine levels during HCVR, HVR, and EVR were 69.5 +/- 11.8, 67.8 +/- 10.8, and 67.8 +/- 10.9 (SD) mumol/l, respectively (P greater than 0.05). Metabolic rate at rest and during exercise was significantly elevated during CF compared with P. An increase in VE from 7.4 +/- 2.5 (P) to 10.5 +/- 2.1 l/min (CF) (P less than 0.05) was associated with a decrease in end-tidal PCO2 from 39.1 +/- 2.7 (P) to 35.1 +/- 1.3 Torr (CF) (P less than 0.05). Caffeine increased the HCVR, HVR, and EVR slopes (mean increase: 28 +/- 8, 135 +/- 28, 14 +/- 5%, respectively) compared with P; P less than 0.05 for each response. Increases in resting ventilation, HCVR, and HVR slopes were associated with increases in tidal volume (VT), whereas the increase in EVR slope was accompanied by increases in both VT and respiratory frequency. Our results indicate that caffeine increases VE and chemosensitivity to CO2 inhalation, hypoxia, and CO2 production during exercise below the AT.  相似文献   

6.
Coagulopathy and alveolar fibrin deposition are common in sick neonates and attributed to the primary disease, as opposed to their ventilatory support. Hypothesizing that high tidal volume ventilation activates the extrinsic coagulation pathway, we air ventilated newborn and adult rats at low (10 ml/kg) or high (30 ml/kg) tidal volume and compared them with age-matched nonventilated controls. Blood was collected at the end of the experiment for measurement of clot time, tissue factor, and other coagulation factor content. Similar measurements were obtained from lung lavage material. The newborn clot time (44+/-1) was lower and plasma tissue factor content higher (103.4+/-0.4) than adults (88+/-4 s and 26.6+/-1.4 units; P<0.01). High, but not low, tidal volume ventilation of newborns for as little as 15 min significantly reduced clot time and increased plasma tissue factor content (P<0.01). High volume ventilation increased plasma factor Xa (0.1+/-0.1 to 1.6+/-0.4 nM; P<0.01) and thrombin (1.3+/-0.2 to 2.2+/-0.4 nM; P<0.05) and decreased antithrombin (0.12+/-0.01 to 0.05+/-0.01; P<0.01) in the newborn. Lung lavage material of high volume-ventilated newborns showed increased (P<0.01) factor Xa and thrombin. No changes in these parameters were observed in adult rats that were high volume ventilated for up to 90 min. Compared with adults, newborn rats have a greater propensity for volutrauma-activated intravascular coagulation. These data suggest that mechanical ventilation promotes neonatal thrombosis via lung tissue factor release.  相似文献   

7.
To test the hypothesis that dopamine accumulated in the carotid body limits hyperventilation during acclimatization to sustained hypoxia, we administered the dopamine antagonist droperidol to mice undergoing acclimatization to an inspired O2 fraction (FIo2) of 0.1. Twelve mice were exposed to hypoxia for 10 days and ventilation in 10% O2 and in 7% CO2 in air were measured daily by a plethysmographic method. Under both conditions ventilation increased during acclimatization to hypoxia: ventilation in 10% O2 increased from 39.4 +/- 3.8 (mean +/- SE) ml/min before exposure to sustained hypoxia to 72.2 +/- 4.2 ml/min after 3 days of continuous hypoxia, and ventilation in 7% CO2 in air at the same time increased from 113.2 +/- 5.4 ml/min to 140.0 +/- 5.6 ml/min. Twelve mice were exposed to FIo2 of 0.1 for 10 days and received droperidol (300 micrograms/kg intraperitoneally) before exposure to sustained hypoxia and on the 2nd, 4th, and 8th days of continuous hypoxia. Before exposure to sustained hypoxia, droperidol increased ventilation in 10% O2 from 40.1 +/- 2.5 ml/min to 72.5 +/- 5.2 ml/min, but after 2, 4, and 8 days of continuous hypoxia droperidol caused an acute fall in ventilation (ventilation in 10% O2 after droperidol on day 2: 49.1 +/- 3.1 ml/min, on day 4: 44.4 +/- 3.7 ml/min, and on day 8: 27.8 +/- 3.4 ml/min). Two days after the animals were returned to room air, ventilation in 10% O2 again increased in response to droperidol. We conclude that dopamine in the carotid body does not limit ventilatory responses to hypoxia during acclimatization to sustained hypoxia.  相似文献   

8.
We have recently reported a decrease in cardiac output in newborn dogs during respiratory alkalosis which is independent of changes in airway pressure. The present study was designed to characterize the mechanism responsible for this reduction in cardiac output. Twelve newborn coonhounds were anaesthetized with pentobarbital, paralyzed with pancuronium and hyperventilated to an arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) of 20 torr. Subsequent changes in PaCO2 were achieved by altering the FiCO2. Measurements were made after 30 min at either 40 or 20 torr PaCO2. The sequence of PaCO2 levels was randomized. Compared to normocarbia, respiratory alkalosis resulted in significantly decreased cardiac output (279 +/- 16 to 222 +/- 10 ml/min per kg, mean +/- SEM, P less than 0.001), stroke volume (1.60 +/- 0.10 to 1.24 +/- 0.06 ml/kg; P less than 0.001), maximum left ventricular dP/dt (1629 +/- 108 to 1406 +/- 79 mmHg/s, P less than 0.01) and left ventricular end diastolic pressure (3.9 +/- 0.4 to 2.9 +/- 0.3 mmHg; P less than 0.001). The decrease in cardiac output during respiratory alkalosis is manifest through a decrease in stroke volume, which is due, at least in part, to the decrease in left ventricular end diastolic pressure. The decrease in maximum left ventricular dP/dt is likely a reflection of the decrease in preload, however, a change in myocardial contractility cannot be excluded. We speculate the decrease in filling pressure may be due to an increase in venous capacitance.  相似文献   

9.
The influence of endogenous and exogenous atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) on pulmonary hemodynamics was investigated in anesthetized pigs during both normoxia and hypoxia. Continuous hypoxic ventilation with 11% O2 was associated with a uniform but transient increase of plasma immunoreactive (ir) ANF that peaked at 15 min. Plasma irANF was inversely related to pulmonary arterial pressure (Ppa; r = -0.66, P less than 0.01) and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR; r = -0.56, P less than 0.05) at 30 min of hypoxia in 14 animals; no such relationship was found during normoxia. ANF infusion after 60 min of hypoxia in seven pigs reduced the 156 +/- 20% increase in PVR to 124 +/- 18% (P less than 0.01) at 0.01 microgram.kg-1.min-1 and to 101 +/- 15% (P less than 0.001) at 0.05 microgram.kg-1.min-1. Cardiac output (CO) and systemic arterial pressure (Psa) remained unchanged, whereas mean Ppa decreased from 25.5 +/- 1.5 to 20.5 +/- 15 mmHg (P less than 0.001) and plasma irANF increased two- to nine-fold. ANF infused at 0.1 microgram.kg-1.min-1 (resulting in a 50-fold plasma irANF increase) decreased Psa (-14%) and reduced CO (-10%); systemic vascular resistance (SVR) was not changed, nor was a further decrease in PVR induced. No change in PVR or SVR occurred in normoxic animals at any ANF infusion rate. These results suggest that ANF may act as an endogenous pulmonary vasodilator that could modulate the pulmonary pressor response to hypoxia.  相似文献   

10.
To investigate the effects of the prostaglandin synthetase inhibitor, meclofenamate, on postnatal ventilation, we studied 11 unanaesthetised, spontaneously-breathing lambs at an average age of 7.9 +/- 1.1 days (SEM; range 5-14 days) and an average weight of 4.9 +/- 0.5 kg (range 3.0-7.0 kg). After a 30-min control period we infused 4.23 mg/kg meclofenamate over 10 min and then gave 0.23 mg/h per kg for the remainder of the 4 h. Ventilation increased progressively from a control value of 515 +/- 72 ml/min per kg to a maximum of 753 +/- 100 ml/min per kg after 3h of infusion (P less than 0.05) due to an increased breathing rate; the effects were similar during both high- and low-voltage electrocortical activity. There were no significant changes in tidal volume, heart rate, blood pressure, arterial pH or PaCO2, the increased ventilation resulted from either an increase in dead space ventilation or an increase in CO2 production. This study indicates that meclofenamate causes an increase in ventilation in lambs but no changes in pH of PaCO2. The mechanism and site of action remain to be defined.  相似文献   

11.
The relationship between CO2 and ventilatory response to sustained hypoxia was examined in nine normal young adults. At three different levels of end-tidal partial pressure of CO2 (PETCO2, approximately 35, 41.8, and 44.3 Torr), isocapnic hypoxia was induced for 25 min and after 7 min of breathing 21% O2, isocapnic hypoxia was reinduced for 5 min. Regardless of PETCO2 levels, the ventilatory response to sustained hypoxia was biphasic, characterized by an initial increase (acute hypoxic response, AHR), followed by a decline (hypoxic depression). The biphasic response pattern was due to alteration in tidal volume, which at all CO2 levels decreased significantly (P less than 0.05), without a significant change in breathing frequency. The magnitude of the hypoxic depression, independent of CO2, correlated significantly (r = 0.78, P less than 0.001) with the AHR, but not with the ventilatory response to CO2. The decline of minute ventilation was not significantly affected by PETCO2 [averaged 2.3 +/- 0.6, 3.8 +/- 1.3, and 4.5 +/- 2.2 (SE) 1/min for PETCO2 35, 41.8, and 44.3 Torr, respectively]. This decay was significant for PETCO2 35 and 41.8 Torr but not for 44.3 Torr. The second exposure to hypoxia failed to elicit the same AHR as the first exposure; at all CO2 levels the AHR was significantly greater (P less than 0.05) during the first hypoxic exposure than during the second. We conclude that hypoxia exhibits a long-lasting inhibitory effect on ventilation that is independent of CO2, at least in the range of PETCO2 studied, but is related to hypoxic ventilatory sensitivity.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
To assess changes in ventilatory regulation in terms of central drive and timing, on exposure to high altitude, and the effects of induced hyperoxia at high altitude, six healthy normal lowland subjects (mean age 19.5 +/- 1.64 yr) were studied at low altitude (518 m) and on the first 4 days at high altitude (3,940 m). The progressive increase in resting expired minute ventilation (VE; control mean 9.94 +/- 1.78 to 14.25 +/- 2.67 l/min on day 3, P less than 0.005) on exposure to high altitude was primarily due to a significant increase in respiratory frequency (f; control mean 15.6 +/- 3.5 breaths/min to 23.8 +/- 6.2 breaths/min on day 3, P less than 0.01) with no significant change in tidal volume (VT). The increase in f was due to significant decreases in both inspiratory (TI) and expiratory (TE) time per breath; the ratio of TI to TE increased significantly (control mean 0.40 +/- 0.08 to 0.57 +/- 0.14, P less than 0.025). Mouth occlusion pressure did not change significantly, nor did the ratio of VE to mouth occlusion pressure. The acute induction of hyperoxia for 10 min at high altitude did not significantly alter VE or the ventilatory pattern. These results indicate that acute exposure to high altitude in normal lowlanders causes an increase in VE primarily by an alteration in central breath timing, with no change in respiratory drive. The acute relief of high altitude hypoxia for 10 min has no effect on the increased VE or ventilatory pattern.  相似文献   

14.
To determine the effect of a single breath of 100% O2 on ventilation, 10 full-term [body wt 3,360 +/- 110 (SE) g, gestational age 39 +/- 0.4 wk, postnatal age 3 +/- 0.6 days] and 10 preterm neonates (body wt 2,020 +/- 60 g, gestational age 34 +/- 2 wk, postnatal age 9 +/- 2 days) were studied during active and quiet sleep states. The single-breath method was used to measure peripheral chemoreceptor response. To enhance response and standardize the control period for all infants, fractional inspired O2 concentration was adjusted to 16 +/- 0.6% for a control O2 saturation of 83 +/- 1%. After 1 min of control in each sleep state, each infant was given a single breath of O2 followed by 21% O2. Minute ventilation (VE), tidal volume (VT), breathing frequency (f), alveolar O2 and CO2 tension, O2 saturation (ear oximeter), and transcutaneous O2 tension were measured. VE always decreased with inhalation of O2 (P less than 0.01). In quiet sleep, the decrease in VE was less in full-term (14%) than in preterm (40%) infants (P less than 0.001). Decrease in VE was due primarily to a drop in VT in full-term infants as opposed to a fall in f and VT in preterm infants (P less than 0.05). Apnea, as part of the response, was more prevalent in preterm than in full-term infants. In active sleep the decrease in VE was similar both among full-term (19%) and preterm (21%) infants (P greater than 0.5). These results suggest greater peripheral chemoreceptor response in preterm than in full-term infants, reflected by a more pronounced decrease in VE with O2. The results are compatible with a more powerful peripheral chemoreceptor contribution to breathing in preterm than in full-term infants.  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
To discover whether increases in inhaled O2 fraction (FIO2; up to 40%) decrease apnea via an increase in minute ventilation (VE) or a change in respiratory pattern, 15 preterm infants (birth weight 1,300 +/- 354 g, gestational age 29 +/- 2 wk, postnatal age 20 +/- 9 days) breathed 21, 25, 30, 35, and 40% O2 for 10 min in quiet sleep. A nosepiece and a flow-through system were used to measure ventilation. Alveolar PCO2, transcutaneous PO2, and sleep states were also assessed. All infants had periodic breathing with apneas greater than or equal to 3 s. With an increase in FIO2 breathing became more regular and apneas decreased (P less than 0.001). This regularization in breathing was not associated with significant changes in VE. However, the variability of VE, tidal volume, and expiratory and inspiratory times decreased significantly. The results indicate that the more regular breathing observed with small increases in FIO2 was not associated with significant changes in ventilation. The findings suggest that the increased oxygenation decreases apnea and periodicity in preterm infants, not via an increase in ventilation, but through a decrease in breath-to-breath variability of VE.  相似文献   

17.
Respiration was measured noninvasively in conscious kittens at an ambient temperature of 28-32 degrees C. Inspired O2 fraction (FIO2) was reduced abruptly from 0.21 to 0.12, 0.10, or 0.08 for 5 min on the day of birth and then on days 4, 7, 14, and 28. The ventilatory response to hypoxia was biphasic, as reported previously in anesthetized kittens, with minute ventilation (VE) increasing in the first minute and then falling towards control over the next 4 min. The fall in VE was due to a consistent fall in tidal volume, the changes in frequency during the second phase being more variable. The size of the first phase of the response increased up to 14 days, but the time at which the peak increase in VE occurred was not correlated with age. The degree of the secondary fall in VE was similar at each age and at each FIO2 studied. The degree of the biphasic response was significantly reduced after administration of almitrine (2 mg/kg ip) on days 1 and 4, but almitrine did not affect the response in older kittens.  相似文献   

18.
Pregnancy increases ventilation and ventilatory sensitivity to hypoxia and hypercapnia. To determine the role of the carotid body in the increased hypoxic ventilatory response, we measured ventilation and carotid body neural output (CBNO) during progressive isocapnic hypoxia in 15 anesthetized near-term pregnant cats and 15 nonpregnant females. The pregnant compared with nonpregnant cats had greater room-air ventilation [1.48 +/- 0.24 vs. 0.45 +/- 0.05 (SE) l/min BTPS, P less than 0.01], O2 consumption (29 +/- 2 vs. 19 +/- 1 ml/min STPD, P less than 0.01), and lower end-tidal PCO2 (30 +/- 1 vs. 35 +/- 1 Torr, P less than 0.01). Lower end-tidal CO2 tensions were also observed in seven awake pregnant compared with seven awake nonpregnant cats (28 +/- 1 vs. 31 +/- 1 Torr, P less than 0.05). The ventilatory response to hypoxia as measured by the shape of parameter A was twofold greater (38 +/- 5 vs. 17 +/- 3, P less than 0.01) in the anesthetized pregnant compared with nonpregnant cats, and the CBNO response to hypoxia was also increased twofold (58 +/- 11 vs. 29 +/- 5, P less than 0.05). The increased CBNO response to hypoxia in the pregnant compared with the nonpregnant cats persisted after cutting the carotid sinus nerve while recording from the distal end, indicating that the increased hypoxic sensitivity was not due to descending central neural influences. We concluded that greater carotid body sensitivity to hypoxia contributed to the increased hypoxic ventilatory responsiveness observed in pregnant cats.  相似文献   

19.
Respiratory adaptation to chronic hypercapnia in newborn rats   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We asked 1) whether newborn rats respond to chronic hypercapnia with a persistent increase in ventilation and 2) whether changes in lung mass were accompanying the respiratory adaptation to chronic hypercapnia, as previously observed during neonatal chronic hypoxia. Five litters of rats were kept in 7% CO2 (with 21% O2) from day 1 to 7 after birth (CO2exp) and compared with six litters of control rats growing in normocapnia-normoxia (C). Body weight was similar between the two groups. Ventilation, measured by flow plethysmography, increased in CO2exp from day 2 and remained steadily elevated, and at day 7 it almost doubled (174%) the C value because of the large increase in tidal volume and mean inspiratory flow (192 and 189%, respectively) with no changes in respiratory frequency. Two days after return to normocapnia, ventilation was still 33% higher than in C; at this time, acute exposure to hypercapnia increased ventilation relatively less in the CO2exp than in C because of a lower increase in tidal volume. Neither the lung weight-to-body weight nor the heart weight-to-body weight ratios increased in CO2exp. We conclude that 1) chronic hypercapnia in newborn rats induces a steady increase in ventilation, which persists at least 2 days after return to normocapnia with a reduction in the acute response to CO2, and 2) hyperventilation per se is not the cause of the increased lung mass observed during chronic neonatal hypoxia.  相似文献   

20.
31P nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P-NMRS) was performed on brain cross sections of four human subjects before and after 7 days in a hypobaric chamber at 447 Torr to test the hypothesis that brain intracellular acidosis develops during acclimatization to high altitude and accounts for the progressively increasing ventilation that develops (ventilatory acclimatization). Arterial blood gas measurements confirmed increased ventilation. At the end of 1 wk of hypobaria, brain intracellular pH was 7.023 +/- 0.046 (SD), unchanged from preexposure pH of 6.998 +/- 0.029. After return to sea level, however, it decreased to 6.918 +/- 0.032 at 15 min (P less than 0.01) and 6.920 +/- 0.046 at 12 h (P less than 0.01). The ventilatory response to hypoxia increased [from 0.35 +/- 0.11 (l/min)/(-%O2 saturation) before exposure to 0.69 +/- 0.19 after, P = 0.06]. Brain intracellular acidosis is probably not a supplemental stimulus to ventilatory acclimatization to high altitude. However, brain intracellular acidosis develops on return to normoxia from chronic hypoxia, suggesting that brain pH may follow changes in blood and cerebrospinal fluid pH as they are altered by changes in ventilation.  相似文献   

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