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1.
Several investigators have observed that irregular breathing occurs during rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep in healthy subjects, with ventilatory suppression being prominent during active eye movements [phasic REM (PREM) sleep] as opposed to tonic REM (TREM) sleep, when ocular activity is absent and ventilation more regular. Inasmuch as considerable data suggest that rapid eye movements are a manifestation of sleep-induced neural events that may importantly influence respiratory neurons, we hypothesized that upper airway dilator muscle activation may also be suppressed during periods of active eye movements in REM sleep. We studied six normal men during single nocturnal sleep studies. Standard sleep-staging parameters, ventilation, and genioglossus and alae nasi electromyograms (EMG) were continuously recorded during the study. There were no significant differences in minute ventilation, tidal volume, or any index of genioglossus or alae nasi EMG amplitude between non-REM (NREM) and REM sleep, when REM was analyzed as a single sleep stage. Each breath during REM sleep was scored as "phasic" or "tonic," depending on its proximity to REM deflections on the electrooculogram. Comparison of all three sleep states (NREM, PREM, and TREM) revealed that peak inspiratory genioglossus and alae nasi EMG activities were significantly decreased during PREM sleep compared with TREM sleep [genioglossus (arbitrary units): NREM 49 +/- 12 (mean +/- SE), TREM 49 +/- 5, PREM 20 +/- 5 (P less than 0.05, PREM different from TREM and NREM); alae nasi: NREM 16 +/- 4, TREM 38 +/- 7, PREM 10 +/- 4 (P less than 0.05, PREM different from TREM)]. We also observed, as have others, that ventilation, tidal volume, and mean inspiratory airflow were significantly decreased and respiratory frequency was increased during PREM sleep compared with both TREM and NREM sleep. We conclude that hypoventilation occurs in concert with reduced upper airway dilator muscle activation during PREM sleep by mechanisms that remain to be established.  相似文献   

2.
Extra-dural or cerebroventricular intracranial pressure was measured in 7 unanaesthetized fetal sheep (123-137 days gestation). Basal intracranial pressure was 6.7 +/- 1.7 mmHg, but there were many transient increases of pressure in association with spontaneous changes of amniotic pressure, fetal intrathoracic pressure, and particularly when the fetal nuchal muscles were active. These spontaneous increases of intracranial pressure were often associated with cessation of breathing movements and change of the electrocorticogram from low to high voltage activity. To test whether increased intracranial pressure influenced breathing movements and electrocortical activity, intracranial pressure was raised either by occluding the superior vena cava for 1 min with an implanted extravascular cuff, or by extra-dural injection of 0.3-1.0 ml of 0.9% NaCl. Increasing the intracranial pressure 5-15 mmHg by either method during low voltage electrocortical activity caused cessation of breathing movements, electro-ocular activity, and change of the electrocorticogram from low to high voltage in a significant proportion of trials. We propose that natural fluctuations of intracranial pressure caused by compression of the fetal body or skull, by body movements or by uterine activity, may cause changes in electrocortical activity and breathing movements.  相似文献   

3.
Negative pressure applied to the upper airway has an excitatory effect on the activity of upper airway muscles and an inhibitory effect on thoracic inspiratory muscles. The role of lung volume feedback in this response was investigated in 10 anesthetized spontaneously breathing adult rabbits. To alter lung volume feedback, the lower airway was exposed to SO2 (250 ppm for 15 min), thereby blocking slowly adapting receptors (SARs). Negative pressure pulses (5, 10, and 20 cmH2O, 300-ms duration) were applied to the functionally isolated upper airway before and after SAR blockade. Tracheal airflow and electromyogram (EMG) of the genioglossus and alae nasi were recorded. Peak EMG, peak inspiratory flow, tidal volume, and respiratory timing of control breaths (3 breaths immediately preceding test) and test breaths were determined. Analysis of variance was used to determine the significance of the effects. Negative pressure pulses increased peak EMG of genioglossus and alae nasi and inspiratory duration and decreased peak inspiratory flow. These effects were larger after SAR blockade. We conclude that a decrease in volume feedback from the lung augments the response to upper airway pressure change.  相似文献   

4.
Both nasal obstruction and nasal anesthesia result in disordered breathing during sleep in humans, and bypassing the nasal route during tidal breathing in experimental animals produces decreased electromyographic activity of upper airway (UA) dilating muscles. To investigate UA responses to breathing route in normal awake humans, we studied eight healthy males (ages 21-38 yr) during successive trials of voluntary nose breathing (N), voluntary mouth breathing (M), and mouth breathing with nose occluded (MO). We measured genioglossus electromyographic activity (EMGgg) with perorally inserted bipolar electrodes, alae nasi (EMGan) and diaphragm EMG activity (EMGdi) with surface electrodes, and minute ventilation (VE) with a pneumotachograph. Mean phasic inspiratory EMG activity of both UA muscles was significantly greater during N than during M or MO, even when a 2.5-cmH2O.l-1.s inspiratory resistance was added to MO (P less than 0.01). In contrast, neither EMGdi nor VE was consistently affected by breathing route. EMGgg during N was significantly decreased after selective topical nasal anesthesia (P less than 0.002); a decrease in EMGan did not achieve statistical significance. These data suggest that peak UA dilating muscle activity may be modulated by superficial receptors in the nasal mucosa sensitive to airflow.  相似文献   

5.
To assess the effect of diaphragmatic ischemia on the inspiratory motor drive, we studied the in situ isolated and innervated left diaphragm in anesthetized, vagotomized, and mechanically ventilated dogs. The arterial and venous vessels of the left diaphragm were catheterized and isolated from the systemic circulation. Inspiratory muscle activation was assessed by recording the integrated electromyographic (EMG) activity of the left and right costal diaphragms and parasternal intercostal and alae nasi muscles. Tension generated by the left diaphragm during spontaneous breathing attempts was also measured. In eight animals, left diaphragmatic ischemia was induced by occluding the phrenic artery for 20 min, followed by 10 min of reperfusion. This elicited a progressive increase in EMG activity of the left and right diaphragms and parasternal and alae nasi muscles to 170, 157, 152, and 128% of baseline values, respectively, an increase in the frequency of breathing efforts, and no change in left diaphragmatic spontaneous tension. Thus the ratio of left diaphragmatic EMG to tension rose progressively during ischemia. During reperfusion, only the frequency of breathing efforts and alae nasi EMG recovered completely. In four additional animals, left diaphragmatic ischemia was induced after the left phrenic nerve was sectioned. Neither EMG activity of inspiratory muscles nor respiratory timing changed significantly during ischemia. In conclusion, diaphragmatic ischemia increases inspiratory motor drive through activation of phrenic afferents. The changes in alae nasi activity and respiratory timing indicate that this influence is achieved through supraspinal pathways.  相似文献   

6.
Closure of the jaw exerts traction on muscles that insert on the hyoid bone and that may stabilize or expand the pharyngeal airway. We postulated that the masseter muscles, which close the jaw, would be activated when the patency of the pharyngeal airway is threatened. We therefore measured electromyographic activation of the masseters during inspiratory resistance loading and compared it with activation of chin muscles and alae nasi in 10 normal subjects. We observed no masseter activation during quiet unloaded breathing, but as pharyngeal pressure became lower there was a significant increase in masseter activation in all subjects. The change in masseter activation relative to pharyngeal pressure was similar to that of chin muscles and alae nasi. Activation of the masseter preceded the fall in pharyngeal pressure as also occurred in the chin muscles and alae nasi. We conclude that the masseters are activated by inspiratory resistance loading and have respiratory activity similar to pharyngeal airway muscles.  相似文献   

7.
Ventilation and electromyogram (EMG) activities of the right hemidiaphragm, parasternal intercostal, triangularis sterni, transversus abdominis, genioglossus, and alae nasi muscles were measured before and during central stimulation of the left thoracic phrenic nerve in 10 alpha-chloralose anesthetized vagotomized dogs. Pressure in the carotid sinuses was fixed to maintain baroreflex activity constant. The nerve was stimulated for 1 min with a frequency of 40 Hz and stimulus duration of 1 ms at voltages of 5, 10, 20, and 30 times twitch threshold (TT). At five times TT, no change in ventilation or EMG activity occurred. At 10 times TT, neither tidal volume nor breathing frequency increased sufficiently to reach statistical significance, although the change in their product (minute ventilation) was significant (P less than 0.05). At 20 and 30 times TT, increases in both breathing frequency and tidal volume were significant. At these stimulus intensities, the increases in ventilation were accompanied by approximately equal increases in the activity of the diaphragm, parasternal, and alae nasi muscles. The increase in genioglossus activity was much greater than that of the other inspiratory muscles. Phrenic nerve stimulation also elicited inhomogeneous activation of the expiratory muscles. The transversus abdominis activity increased significantly at intensities from 10 to 30 times TT, whereas the activity of the triangularis sterni remained unchanged. The high stimulation intensities required suggest that the activation of afferent fiber groups III and IV is involved in the response. We conclude that thin-fiber phrenic afferent activation exerts a nonuniform effect on the upper airway, rib cage, and abdominal muscles and may play a role in the control of respiratory muscle recruitment.  相似文献   

8.
The fetal respiratory and electrocortical effects of 0.6 microgram to 600 micrograms of morphine, administered into the lateral cerebral ventricle, have been studied in chronically catheterised, unanaesthetized fetal sheep at 115-135 days gestation. Morphine at 0.6 microgram had no effect on breathing movements or electrocorticographic activity, and at 6 micrograms induced a period of apnoea (43-122 min) but had no effect on electrocortical activity. Intravenous naloxone (2 mg bolus and infusion of 2 mg/kg/h for 2 h) to the fetus had no effect on this apnoea. Morphine at 60 micrograms induced an initial period of apnoea (30-65 min) followed by episodic but significantly deep breathing movements with no effect on electrocortical activity and at 600 micrograms induced an initial period of apnoea (22-95 min) which was followed by deep, irregular and continuous (126-302 min) breathing movements. During the apnoea electrocortical activity initially remained cyclic, but as apnoea progressed there was a gradual reduction in the voltage of the electrocorticogram to a low voltage state. Intravenous naloxone (2 mg bolus and infusion of 2 mg/kg/h for 2 h) reversed both the respiratory and electrocortical effects. The hyperventilation was also inhibited by hypoxia. Naloxone alone had no effect on fetal breathing activity.  相似文献   

9.
The incidence of fetal breathing movements and low voltage electrocortical activity was measured in three groups of fetal sheep, at 123-137 days gestation. The first group (transected & denervated) had the brainstem transected at the level of the colliculi and also had peripheral arterial chemodenervation. The second group (denervated) had a sham brain-stem transection and peripheral arterial chemodenervation. The third group (sham-operated) had sham brain-stem transection and sham peripheral chemodenervation. No differences were observed in the incidence of fetal breathing movements or low voltage electrocortical activity between the sham-operated and the denervated groups in normoxia, or in hypoxia when all these fetuses became apnoeic. There were however differences between these 2 groups and the transected & denervated group, in which fetal breathing movements where dissociated from electrocortical activity and which in some fetuses were continuous. During isocapnic hypoxia 3 of 8 transected & denervated fetuses made fetal breathing movements. We discuss the problems of interpreting data from brain-stem transected fetuses, but conclude that the evidence reveals no tonic influence of the peripheral arterial chemoreceptors on fetal breathing movements.  相似文献   

10.
The influence of nasal airflow, temperature, and pressure on upper airway muscle electromyogram (EMG) was studied during steady-state exercise in five normal subjects. Alae nasi (AN) and genioglossus EMG activity was recorded together with nasal and oral airflows and pressures measured simultaneously by use of a partitioned face mask. At constant ventilations between 30 and 50 l/min, peak inspiratory AN activity during nasal breathing (7.2 +/- 1.4 arbitrary units) was greater than that during oral breathing (1.0 +/- 0.3 arbitrary units; P less than 0.005). In addition, the onset of AN EMG activity preceded inspiratory flow by 0.38 +/- 0.03 s during nasal breathing but by only 0.17 +/- 0.04 s during oral breathing (P less than 0.04). When the subject changed from nasal to oral breathing, both these differences were apparent on the first breath. However, peak AN activity during nasal breathing was uninfluenced by inspiration of hot saturated air (greater than 40 degrees C), by external inspiratory nasal resistance, or by changes in the expiratory route. The genioglossus activity did not differ between nasal and oral breathing (n = 2). Our findings do not support reflex control of AN activity sensitive to nasal flow, temperature, or surface pressure. We propose a centrally controlled feedforward modulation of phasic inspiratory AN activity linked with the tonic drive to the muscles determining upper airway breathing route.  相似文献   

11.
Human upper airway dilator muscles are clearly influenced by chemical stimuli such as hypoxia and hypercapnia. Whether in humans there are upper airway receptors capable of modifying the activity of such muscles is unclear. We studied alae nasi electromyography (EMG) in normal men in an attempt to determine 1) whether increasing negative intraluminal pressure influences the activity of the alae nasi muscle, 2) whether nasal airway feedback mechanisms modify the activity of this muscle, and 3) if so, whether these receptor mechanisms are responding to mucosal temperature/pressure changes or to airway deformation. Alae nasi EMG was recorded in 10 normal men under the following conditions: 1) nasal breathing (all potential nasal receptors exposed), 2) oral breathing (nasal receptors not exposed), 3) nasal breathing with splints (airway deformation prevented), and 4) nasal breathing after nasal anesthesia (mucosal receptors anesthetized). In addition, in a separate group, the combined effects of anesthesia and nasal splints were assessed. Under each condition, EMG activity was monitored during basal breathing, progressive hypercapnia, and inspiratory resistive loading. Under all four conditions, both load and hypercapnia produced a significant increase in alae nasi EMG, with hypercapnia producing a similar increment in EMG regardless of nasal receptor exposure. On the other hand, loading produced greater increments in EMG during nasal than during oral breathing, with combined anesthesia plus splinting producing a load response similar to that observed during oral respiration. These observations suggest that nasal airway receptors have little effect on the alae nasi response to hypercapnia but appear to mediate the alae nasi response to loading or negative airway pressure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Effect of upper airway pressure changes on thoracic inspiratory muscles has been shown to depend on the time of application during the breathing cycle. The present study was designed to investigate the importance of the time of application of upper airway negative pressure pulses on upper airway muscles. The upper airway was functionally isolated into a closed system in 24 anesthetized spontaneously breathing rabbits. Negative pressure pulses were applied in early (within the first 200 ms) and late (greater than or equal to 200 ms) inspiration, while electromyograms (EMG) of the diaphragm (Dia), genioglossus (GG), alae nasi (AN), and/or posterior cricoarytenoid (PCA) muscles were simultaneously monitored. When negative pressure pulse was applied in early inspiration, the increase in GG activity was greater [0.49 +/- 0.37 to 4.24 +/- 3.71 arbitrary units (AU)] than when negative pressure was applied in late inspiration (0.44 +/- 0.29 to 2.64 +/- 3.05 AU). Similarly, increased activation of AN (2.63 +/- 1.01 to 4.26 +/- 1.69 AU) and PCA (3.46 +/- 1.16 to 6.18 +/- 2.93 AU) was also observed with early inspiratory application of negative pressure pulses; minimal effects were seen in these muscles with late application. An inhibitory effect on respiratory timing consisting of a prolongation in inspiration (TI) and a decrease in peak Dia EMG/TI was observed as previously reported. These results indicate that the time of application of negative pressure during the breathing cycle is an important variable in determining the magnitude of the response of upper airway muscles.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The aim of this study was to characterize the pre-natal activity of the respiratory muscles in a non-ruminant, the pig. Tracheal pressure was recorded from 11 unanaesthetized fetal pigs in utero during late gestation in 9 sows. Two types of inspiratory effort occurred episodically in each fetus during each recording period. Episodes of breathing movements lasted 8.6 +/- 1.1 min and their overall incidence was 41.1 +/- 3.4% of recording time. The mean amplitude of the respiratory efforts was 7.6 +/- 1.1 mmHg and the mean inspiratory time was 0.8 +/- 0.1 s. Episodes of non-respiratory inspiratory efforts, considered to be fetal hiccups, lasted 5.6 +/- 0.8 min. Individual hiccups had a duration of 150-200 msec, a mean amplitude of 41.4 +/- 2.4 mmHg and a mean frequency, during episodes, of 21.9 +/- 2.0 min-1. In contrast to fetal breathing movements, hiccups appeared to be stereotyped events. It is concluded that, in common with other ruminant and non-ruminant species, two types of inspiratory effort occur in the fetal pig. Fetal hiccups, which have been observed in non-ruminant species, may be analogous to deep inspiratory efforts in the sheep fetus. The stimulus for, and function of, fetal hiccupping remain to be determined.  相似文献   

14.
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   

15.
Isocapnic hypoxaemia (delta PaO2 = -8.0 +/- 0.5 mmHg; delta CaO2 = -2.86 +/- 0.20 ml/dl) was produced in fetal sheep by having the ewe breathe for one hour a gas mixture (v/v) of 10.5% O2 and 1.5% CO2 in N2. Mean fetal heart rate, blood pressure, and incidence of low voltage electrocortical activity were not affected. However, the incidence of rapid-eye-movements and breathing activity was reduced by about 40%. Breathing movements during hypoxaemia had a mean inspiratory time, breath interval, and tracheal pressure amplitude which did not differ significantly from those during control experiments in which the ewe breathed air from the plastic bag. These observations suggest that hypoxia decreases the incidence of breathing movements but does not affect the amplitude or pattern of breathing activity and that it may reduce the incidence of eye movements and breathing activity through a common mechanism.  相似文献   

16.
To determine the combined effect of increased subatmospheric upper airway pressure and withdrawal of phasic volume feedback from the lung on genioglossus muscle activity, the response of this muscle to intermittent nasal airway occlusion was studied in 12 normal adult males during sleep. Nasal occlusion at end expiration was achieved by inflating balloon-tipped catheters located within the portals of a nose mask. No seal was placed over the mouth. During nose breathing in non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep, nasal airway occlusion resulted in multiple respiratory efforts before arousal. Mouth breathing was not initiated until arousal. Phasic inspiratory genioglossus activity was present in eight subjects during NREM sleep. In these subjects, comparison of peak genioglossus inspiratory activity on the first three occluded efforts to the value just before occlusion showed an increase of 4.7, 16.1, and 28.0%, respectively. The relative increases in peak genioglossus activity were very similar to respective increases in peak diaphragm activity. Arousal was associated with a large burst in genioglossus activity. During airway occlusion in rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep, mouth breathing could occur without a change in sleep state. In general, genioglossus responses to airway occlusion in REM sleep were similar in pattern to those in NREM sleep. A relatively small reflex activation of upper airway muscles associated with a sudden increase in subatmospheric pressure in the potentially collapsible segment of the upper airway may help compromise upper airway patency during sleep.  相似文献   

17.
In fetal sheep acute hypoxia causes a decreased incidence of breathing movements and motor activity, and the excitability of polysynaptic reflexes in the hindlimbs is depressed. To determine whether this inhibitory effect extends to other areas in the fetal CNS, we have studied the effect of hypoxia on two reflexes with cranial pathways. The digastric (jaw opening) reflex was elicited by stimulation of the dental nerve through a pair of stainless steel electrodes implanted into the mandible (4 fetuses). The thyroarytenoid muscle of the larynx was reflexly activated by stimulation of the superior laryngeal nerve by a cuff electrode (4 fetuses). Low level stimulation at 1.5-2 X threshold was repeated at approximately 2 min intervals for 3-4 h; the stimulation did not alter the pattern of electrocortical activity, breathing movements, or cause arousal. The amplitude of the digastric reflex was greatest during low voltage electrocortical activity; conversely, the amplitude of the thyroarytenoid reflex was greatest during high voltage electrocortical activity. Isocapnic hypoxia lasting 30-60 min (16 trials), in which the PaO2 was reduced to 12-14 mmHg, did not reduce the amplitude of either reflex. The reduction of thyroarytenoid reflex amplitude which normally occurred during low voltage electrocortical activity was not present during hypoxia. These experiments show that the inhibitory effects of hypoxia on spinal reflexes, breathing movements and motor activity do not include these cranial pathways.  相似文献   

18.
Hypoxia inhibits fetal breathing movements but after birth it stimulates breathing. These differences have long been thought to involve central nervous inhibitory mechanisms. Such mechanisms might exert a tonic inhibition of fetal breathing movements at normal fetal PaO2 and the rise in PaO2 at birth might lift this inhibitory effect. To test this hypothesis 7 fetal sheep were chronically instrumented at 125-130 days for recording electrocortical activity (ECoG), and the electromyograph (EMG) activity of the diaphragm and neck muscles. Catheters were placed in a fetal carotid and a brachial artery and in the fetal trachea. For an extracorporeal membrane oxygenation system a 12 F gauge silastic catheter was placed in the right atrium for draining fetal blood and a 9.6 F gauge catheter was placed in a carotid artery to return oxygenated blood. Three days after operation the fetuses were connected to the extracorporeal membrane oxygenation system and fetal PaO2 was raised to 65.2 +/- 4.4 mmHg (SEM) for 6 to 19 h without changing pH or PaCO2. Neither the incidence of high voltage ECoG (48.5 +/- SEM 2.0% vs 52.8 +/- 3.3%) nor of fetal breathing movements (37.3 +/- 2.6% vs 23.8 +/- 5.9%) changed during the periods of hyperoxia. Since fetal breathing movements did not become continuous, we conclude that the lower PaO2 in the fetus compared to the neonate does not exert a tonic inhibitory influence on fetal breathing movements.  相似文献   

19.
Respiratory changes in nasal muscle length   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Respiratory changes in alae nasi muscle length were recorded using sonomicrometry in pentobarbital sodium-anesthetized tracheostomized dogs spontaneously breathing 100% O2. Piezoelectric crystals were inserted via small incisions into the alae nasi of 11 animals, and bipolar fine-wire electrodes were inserted contralaterally in nine of the same animals. The alae nasi shortened during inspiration in all animals. The mean amount of shortening was 1.33 +/- 0.22% of resting length (LR), and the mean velocity of shortening during the first 200 ms was 4.60 +/- 0.69% LR/S. The onset of alae nasi shortening preceded inspiratory flow by 77 +/- 18 ms (P less than 0.002), at which time both alae nasi shortening and the moving average of electromyographic (EMG) activity had reached approximately one-third of their peak values. In contrast, there was a relative delay in alae nasi relaxation relative to the decay of alae nasi EMG at the end of expiration. Single-breath airway occlusions at end expiration changed the normally rounded pattern of alae nasi shortening and moving average EMG to a late-inspiratory peaking pattern; both total shortening and EMG were increased by similar amounts. The onset of vagally mediated volume-related inhibition of alae nasi shortening occurred synchronously with the onset of inhibition of alae nasi EMG; both occurred at lung volumes substantially below tidal volume. These results indicate that the pattern of inspiratory shortening of this nasal dilating muscle is reflected closely in the pattern of EMG activity and that vagal afferents cause substantial inhibition of alae nasi inspiratory shortening.  相似文献   

20.
High environmental temperature is known to impair fetal growth and development. We now report long lasting changes in fetal breathing activity following the exposure of pregnant ewes to an ambient temperature of 43 degrees C for 8 h. In 16 trials in 10 ewes (119-138 days gestation) heat exposure increased maternal and fetal core temperatures 1.5-2.0 degrees C, and the hyperventilation by the ewe produced a fall in fetal PaCO2 from 53.5 +/- 1.3 to 34.8 +/- 5.3 mmHg (P less than 0.05). Fetal breathing movements decreased in incidence during the hyperthermia but remained episodic (present during low-voltage electrocortical activity) with occasional brief episodes of breathing at high rates (greater than 4 breaths/s). However, 1-2 h after the end of heating, when maternal and fetal core temperature and PaCO2 had returned to normal, fetal breathing movements became continuous, and were augmented 30-100% in amplitude. Fetal breathing movements occurred during both low- and high-voltage electrocortical activity. The results show that a heat load similar to that experienced by sheep in sub-tropical regions in the summer months cause prolonged changes in the central regulation of fetal breathing.  相似文献   

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