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1.
In awake lambs we investigated the role of the peripheral chemoreceptors in producing dynamic ventilatory (VE) responses to CO2. The immediate VE response, within 15 s, to transient CO2 inhalation was studied in two groups: 1) five lambs before carotid denervation and 2) the same lambs after carotid denervation. The time course of VE responses during the first 60 s after a step change to 8% inspired CO2 was also studied in lambs after carotid denervation and in a group of six carotid body-intact lambs 10-11 days of age. Acute CO2 responses were assessed using step changes to various concentrations of CO2 + air and CO2 + O2, while VE was recorded breath by breath. Intact lambs exhibited a brisk VE response to step changes in CO2, beginning after 3-5 s. Hyperoxia altered but did not suppress the dynamic VE CO2 response when the carotid chemoreceptors were intact. Carotid denervation markedly reduced the VE response during the first 25 s after a CO2 step change, revealing the time delay required for the central chemoreceptors to produce an effective VE response. The residual VE response remaining after CD was thought to be mediated by the remaining aortic body chemoreceptors and was eliminated by adding O2 to the CO2 challenges. However, after carotid denervation, even with CO2 + hyperoxia, the onset of a small tidal volume response was apparent by 10-12 s.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
Steady-state breathing patterns on mouthpiece and noseclip (MP) and face mask (MASK) during air and chemostimulated breathing were obtained from pneumotachometer flow. On air, all 10 subjects decreased frequency (f) and increased tidal volume (VT) on MP relative to that on MASK without changing ventilation (VE), mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI), or mean expiratory flow (VT/TE). On elevated CO2 and low O2, MP exaggerated the increase in VE, f, and VT/TE due to profoundly shortened TE. On elevated CO2, MASK exaggerated VT increase with little change in f. Increased VE and VT/TI were thus due to increased VT. During low O2 on MASK, both VT and f increased. During isocapnia, shortened TE accounted for increased f; during hypocapnia, increased f was related primarily to shortened TI. Thus the choice of a mouthpiece or face mask differentially alters breathing pattern on air and all components of ventilatory responses to chemostimuli. In addition, breathing apparatus effects are not a simple consequence of a shift from oronasal to oral breathing, since a noseclip under the mask did not change breathing pattern from that on mask alone.  相似文献   

3.
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   

4.
A mouthpiece plus noseclip (MP + NC) is frequently used in performing measurements of breathing patterns. Although the effects the apparatus exerts on breathing patterns have been studied, the mechanism of the changes it causes remains unclear. The current study examines the effects on respiratory patterns of a standard (17-mm-diam) MP + NC during room air (RA) breathing and the administration of 2 and 4% CO2 in normal volunteers and in patients 2-4 days after abdominal operation. When compared with values obtained with a noninvasive canopy system, the MP + NC induced increases in minute ventilation (VE), tidal volume (VT), and mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI), but not frequency (f) or inspiratory duty cycle, during both RA and CO2 administration. The percentage increase in VE, VT, and VT/TI caused by the MP + NC decreased as the concentration of CO2 increased. During RA breathing, the application of noseclip alone resulted in a decrease in f and an increase in VT, but VE and VT/TI were unchanged. The changes were attenuated during the administration of 2 and 4% CO2. Reducing the diameter of the mouthpiece to 9 mm abolished the alterations in breathing pattern observed with the larger (17-mm) diameter MP.  相似文献   

5.
Ventilatory responses of 10 control and 10 dystrophic male hamsters to air, hypercapnia, and hypoxia were evaluated at four ages (40, 70, 100, and 140 days). Tidal volume (VT), frequency (f), minute ventilation (VE) as well as inspiratory and expiratory time of awake animals were measured with a plethysmograph. There was a small increase of VT in both groups with age. Although there was no change of f in the control group with age, there was a progressive decrease in f (means +/- SE: 92 +/- 8, 97 +/- 9, 74.5 +/- 10, and 68 +/- 8 breaths/min) in the dystrophic group. Consequently VE on air decreased in the dystrophic group. Both groups showed similar responses to hypoxia (13 and 10% O2) and hypercapnia (3, 5, and 8% CO2) at 40 days. By 70 days the hypercapnic, but not hypoxic, response of the dystrophic animals was significantly decreased compared with that of the control group (at 8% CO2, VE = 47.4 +/- 4.1 vs. 75.7 +/- 7.6 ml/min, P less than 0.01). At both 100 and 140 days the response of the dystrophic group to CO2 was flat; i.e., the slope VE vs. fractional concentration of inspired CO2 was close to zero, and the hypoxic responses were greatly diminished. Because hamsters increase VE in response to CO2 primarily by increasing VT, the data suggest that dystrophic hamsters are unable to increase VT at a very early age, presumably due to muscle weakness. The normal response of hamsters to hypoxia, which is primarily to increase f, appears to be maintained for a longer time.  相似文献   

6.
We have studied the breathing pattern (minute ventilation VE, tidal volume VT, and respiratory rate f) in newborn rats before and during barbiturate (20-30 mg/kg ip) or ketamine anesthesia (40-80 mg/kg ip). Animals were intact and prone in a flow plethysmograph in thermoneutral conditions. Before anesthesia, CO2 breathing (5 min in 5% and 5 min in 10% CO2 in O2) resulted in a substantial increase in VE (169 and 208%, respectively), which was maintained throughout the entire CO2 breathing period. This indicates that, despite the extremely large VE per kilogram at rest, in these small animals there is still a large reserve for a sustained increase in VE. During barbiturate, the resting VE dropped to 45% of control, due to a reduction in VT (83%) and f (59%). This latter result was due to a prolongation of the expiratory time (214%) with no significant changes in inspiratory time. CO2 response was also much depressed, to approximately 63% of the control. The late portion of the expiratory flow-volume curves, the slope of which represents the expiratory time constant of the system, was similar before and during anesthesia in approximately 50% of the animals, whereas it increased during anesthesia in the remaining animals. Although compliance of the respiratory system was generally unaltered, the increased impedance during anesthesia probably reflected an increased resistance. Qualitatively similar results were obtained during ketamine anesthesia. Therefore, as observed in adult mammals, anesthesia in newborn rats has a marked depressant effect on resting breathing pattern and CO2 response, occasionally accompanied by an increase in the expiratory impedance of the respiratory system.  相似文献   

7.
Minute ventilation (VE) and breathing pattern during an abrupt increase in fractional CO2 were compared in 10 normal subjects before and after airway anesthesia. Subjects breathed 7% CO2-93% O2 for 5 min before and after inhaling aerosolized lidocaine. As a result of airway anesthesia, VE and tidal volume (VT) were greater during hypercapnia, but there was no effect on inspiratory time (TI). Therefore, airway anesthesia produced an increase in mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI) during hypercapnia. The increase in VT/TI was compatible with an increase in neuromuscular output. There was no effect of airway anesthesia on the inspiratory timing ratio or the shape and position of the curve relating VT and TI. We also compared airway resistance (Raw), thoracic gas volume, forced vital capacity, forced expired volume at 1s, and maximum midexpiratory flow rate before and after airway anesthesia. A small (0.18 cmH2O X l-1 X s) decrease in Raw occurred after airway anesthesia that did not correlate with the effect of airway anesthesia on VT/TI. We conclude that airway receptors accessible to airway anesthesia play a role in hypercapnic VE.  相似文献   

8.
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   

9.
We tested the hypothesis that integrated sympathetic and cardiovascular reflexes are modulated by systemic CO2 differently in hypoxia than in hyperoxia (n = 7). Subjects performed a CO2 rebreathe protocol that equilibrates CO2 partial pressures between arterial and venous blood and that elevates end tidal CO2 (PET(CO2)) from approximately 40 to approximately 58 mmHg. This test was repeated under conditions where end tidal oxygen levels were clamped at 50 (hypoxia) or 200 (hyperoxia) mmHg. Heart rate (HR; EKG), stroke volume (SV; Doppler ultrasound), blood pressure (MAP; finger plethysmograph), and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) were measured continuously during the two protocols. MAP at 40 mmHg PET(CO2) (i.e., the first minute of the rebreathe) was greater during hypoxia versus hyperoxia (P < 0.05). However, the increase in MAP during the rebreathe (P < 0.05) was similar in hypoxia (16 +/- 3 mmHg) and hyperoxia (17 +/- 2 mmHg PET(CO2)). The increase in cardiac output (Q) at 55 mmHg PET(CO2) was greater in hypoxia (2.61 +/- 0.7 L/min) versus hyperoxia (1.09 +/- 0.44 L/min) (P < 0.05). In both conditions the increase in Q was due to elevations in both HR and SV (P < 0.05). Systemic vascular conductance (SVC) increased to similar absolute levels in both conditions but rose earlier during hypoxia (> 50 mmHg PET(CO2)) than hyperoxia (> 55 mmHg). MSNA increased earlier during hypoxic hypercapnia (> 45 mmHg) compared with hyperoxic hypercapnia (> 55 mmHg). Thus, in these conscious humans, the dose-response effect of PET(CO2) on the integrated cardiovascular responses was shifted to the left during hypoxic hypercapnia. The combined data indicate that peripheral chemoreceptors exert important influence over cardiovascular reflex responses to hypercapnia.  相似文献   

10.
Amphibious crabs, Cardisoma guanhumi, were acclimated to breathing either air or water and exposed to altered levels of oxygen and/or carbon dioxide in the medium. Hypercapnia (22, 36 and 73 torr CO(2)) stimulated a significant hypercapnic ventilatory response (HCVR) in both groups of crabs, with a much greater effect on scaphognathite frequency (Deltaf(SC)=+700%) in air-breathing crabs than water-breathing crabs (Deltaf(SC)=+100%). In contrast, hyperoxia induced significant hypoventilation in both sets of crabs. However, simultaneous hyperoxia and hypercapnia triggered a greater than 10-fold increase in f(SC) in air-breathing crabs but no change in water-breathing crabs. For water-breathing crabs hypoxia simultaneous with hypercapnia triggered the same response as hypoxia alone-bradycardia (-50%), and a significant increase in f(SC) at moderate exposures but not at the more extreme levels. The response of air-breathing crabs to hypoxia concurrent with hypercapnia was proportionally closer to the response to hypercapnia alone than to hypoxia. Thus, C. guanhumi were more sensitive to ambient CO(2) than O(2) when breathing air, characteristic of fully terrestrial species, and more sensitive to ambient O(2) when breathing water, characteristic of fully aquatic species. C. guanhumi possesses both an O(2)- and a CO(2)-based ventilatory drive whether breathing air or water, but the relative importance switches when the respiratory medium is altered.  相似文献   

11.
We have previously observed that the guinea-pig appears to have a relatively poor ventilatory (V (E)) response to hypoxia, compared to other mammals. Therefore, in this study, we questioned the ability of the carotid bodies (primary peripheral chemoreceptors) in the guinea-pig to detect hypoxia. The ventilatory responses to poikilocapnic hypoxia (8% O(2)), poikilooxic hypercapnia (8% CO(2)), hyperoxia (100% O(2)) and cyanide (NaCN - 200 mug/kg, i.v.) were assessed before and after carotid body denervation (CBD) in anaesthetized guinea-pigs. Although CBD attenuated the V (E) responses to hypercapnia and cyanide, it had no effect on normoxic breathing or the V (E) responses to hypoxia or hyperoxia. In a separate group of guinea-pigs, nerve activity was recorded from single or few-fibre preparations of the carotid sinus nerve (CSN). Basal chemoreceptor activity could not be detected from any of the nerve preparations. NaCN and hypercapnia consistently provoked an increase in neural activity. In contrast, hypoxia never clearly increased activity in any of the single or few-fibre preparations isolated from the CSN. In conclusion, although the carotid bodies of the guinea-pig, like those of other mammals, are able to detect hypercapnia and histotoxic hypoxia and elicit a reflex increase in V (E), they are essentially hypoxia-insensitive. The latter may explain, at least in part, the relatively poor V (E) response to hypoxia shown by the guinea-pig.  相似文献   

12.
The individual importance of peripheral chemosensitive afferents was studied using a transient hypercapnia (inhalation of a 5% or a 10% CO2 in air gas mixture respectively during 4 or 2 breaths) in human conscious subjects chosen for their different eupnoeic ventilatory patterns. Calculation of the speed of change in end-tidal CO2 pressure in tracheal gas (sPETCO2) and of the rate of change in tidal volume (sVI) gave assessment for quantifying the sensitivity of arterial chemoreceptors to hypercapnia (sCO2=SVI/SPETCO2). Our results showed that, independently of any outside influence of the eupnoeic ventilatory pattern on the components of the chemical stimulus, sVI and sCO2 were found to be much smaller in subjects whose pattern of breathing was slow (i.e. having a large tidal volume). The possible causes of the weak importance of peripheral chemosensitive afferents in such subjects were discussed.  相似文献   

13.
To investigate the hypothesis that the impaired respiratory drive noted in morbid obesity was attributable to altered dopaminergic mechanisms acting on peripheral and/or central chemoreflex sensitivity, seven obese and seven lean Zucker rats were studied at 11 wk of age. Ventilation (VE) was measured by the barometric technique during hyperoxic (100% O(2)), normoxic (21% O(2)), hypoxic (10% O(2)), and hypercapnic (7% CO(2)) exposures after the administration of vehicle (control), haloperidol [Hal, 1 mg/kg, a central and peripheral dopamine (Da) receptor antagonist], or domperidone (Dom, 0.5 mg/kg, a peripheral Da receptor antagonist). In both lean and obese rats, Hal increased tidal volume and decreased respiratory frequency during hyperoxia or normoxia, resulting in an unchanged VE. In contrast, Dom did not affect tidal volume, frequency, or VE during hyperoxia or normoxia. During hypoxia, however, VE significantly increased from 1,132 +/- 136 to 1,348 +/- 98 ml. kg(-1). min(-1) (P < 0.01) after the administration of Dom in obese rats, whereas no change was observed in lean rats. Hal significantly decreased VE during hypoxia compared with control in lean but not obese rats. In both lean and obese rats, Hal decreased VE in response to hypercapnia, whereas Dom had no effect. Our major findings suggest that peripheral chemosensitivity to hypoxia in obese Zucker rats is reduced as a result of an increased dopaminergic receptor modulation in the carotid body.  相似文献   

14.
SYNOPSIS. Studies on extant bimodally breathing vertebratesoffer us a chance to gain insight into the changes in respiratorycontrol during the evolutionary transition from water to airbreathing. In primitive Actinopterygian air-breathingfishes(Lepisosteus and Amid), gill ventilation is driven by an endogenouslyactive central rhythm generator that is powerfully modulatedby afferent input from internally and externally oriented branchialchemoreceptors, as it is in water-breathing Actinopterygians.The effects of internal or external chemoreceptor stimulationon water and air breathing vary substantially in these aquaticair breathers, suggesting that their roles are evolutionarilymalleable. Air breathing in these bimodal breathers usuallyoccurs as single breaths taken at irregular intervals and isan on-demand phenomenon activated primarily by afferent inputfrom the branchial chemoreceptors. There is no evidence forcentral CO2/pH sensitive chemoreceptors and air-breathing organmechanoreceptors have little influence over branchial- or air-breathingpatterns in Actinopterygian air breathers. In the Sarcopterygianlungfish Lepidosiren and Protopterus, ventilation of the highlyreduced gills is relatively unresponsive to chemoreceptor ormechanoreceptor input. The branchial chemoreceptors of the anteriorarches appear to monitor arterialized blood, while chemoreceptorsin the posterior arches may monitor venous blood. Lungfish respondvigorously to hypercapnia, but it is not known whether theseresponses are mediated by central or peripheral chemoreceptors.A major difference between the Sarcopterygian and Actinopterygianbimodal breathers is that lungfish can inflate their lungs usingrhythmic bouts of air breathing, and lung mechanoreceptors influencethe onset and termination of these lung inflation cycles. Thecontrol of breathing in amphibians appears similar to that oflungfish. Branchial ventilation may persist as rhythmic buccaloscillations in most adults, and stimulation of peripheral chemoreceptorsin the aortic arch or carotid labyrinths initiates short boutsof breathing. Ventilation is much more responsive to hypercapniain adult amphibians than in Actinopterygian fishes because ofcentral CO2/pH sensitive chemoreceptors that act to convertperiodic to more continuous breathing patterns when stimulated.  相似文献   

15.
To investigate the contribution of the peripheral chemoreceptors to the susceptibility to posthyperventilation apnea, we evaluated the time course and magnitude of hypocapnia required to produce apnea at different levels of peripheral chemoreceptor activation produced by exposure to three levels of inspired P(O2). We measured the apneic threshold and the apnea latency in nine normal sleeping subjects in response to augmented breaths during normoxia (room air), hypoxia (arterial O2 saturation = 78-80%), and hyperoxia (inspired O2 fraction = 50-52%). Pressure support mechanical ventilation in the assist mode was employed to introduce a single or multiple numbers of consecutive, sigh-like breaths to cause apnea. The apnea latency was measured from the end inspiration of the first augmented breath to the onset of apnea. It was 12.2 +/- 1.1 s during normoxia, which was similar to the lung-to-ear circulation delay of 11.7 s in these subjects. Hypoxia shortened the apnea latency (6.3 +/- 0.8 s; P < 0.05), whereas hyperoxia prolonged it (71.5 +/- 13.8 s; P < 0.01). The apneic threshold end-tidal P(CO2) (Pet(CO2)) was defined as the Pet(CO2)) at the onset of apnea. During hypoxia, the apneic threshold Pet(CO2) was higher (38.9 +/- 1.7 Torr; P < 0.01) compared with normoxia (35.8 +/- 1.1; Torr); during hyperoxia, it was lower (33.0 +/- 0.8 Torr; P < 0.05). Furthermore, the difference between the eupneic Pet(CO2) and apneic threshold Pet(CO2) was smaller during hypoxia (3.0 +/- 1.0 Torr P < 001) and greater during hyperoxia (10.6 +/- 0.8 Torr; P < 0.05) compared with normoxia (8.0 +/- 0.6 Torr). Correspondingly, the hypocapnic ventilatory response to CO2 below the eupneic Pet(CO2) was increased by hypoxia (3.44 +/- 0.63 l.min(-1).Torr(-1); P < 0.05) and decreased by hyperoxia (0.63 +/- 0.04 l.min(-1).Torr(-1); P < 0.05) compared with normoxia (0.79 +/- 0.05 l.min(-1).Torr(-1)). These findings indicate that posthyperventilation apnea is initiated by the peripheral chemoreceptors and that the varying susceptibility to apnea during hypoxia vs. hyperoxia is influenced by the relative activity of these receptors.  相似文献   

16.
Hypoxia causes changes in the rate of synthesis or release of neurotransmitters in the brain. The accumulation of serotonin (5-HT) in the central nervous system might cause hypoxic respiratory depression. In the present study, we aimed to examine the role of central 5-HT on normoxic and acute hypoxic ventilatory depression (AHVD) in peripheral chemoreceptors denervated rabbits. All experiments were performed in peripherally chemodenervated rabbits anesthetized with intravenous injection of urethane (400 mg/kg) and alpha-chloralose (40 mg/kg). For intracerebroventricular (ICV) administration of 5-HT (20 microg/kg) and ketanserin (10 microg/kg), a cannula was placed in left lateral ventricle by stereotaxic method. Respiratory frequency (fR), tidal volume (VT), ventilation minute volume (VE) and systemic arterial bood pressure (BP) were recorded in each experimental phases and mean arterial pressure was calculated (MAP). Heart rate (HR) was also determined from the pulsation of BP. The effects of ICV serotonin and ICV ketanserin on the indicated parameters during air breathing (normoxia) and breathing of hypoxia (8% O2--92% N2) were investigated. During hypoxia, fR, VT, VE, MAP and HR decreased, and AHVD was thus obtained. ICV injection of 5-HT during normoxia caused significant increases in VT (P < 0.001) and in VE (P < 0.01). On the other hand, ICV 5-HT injection reduced the degree of AHVD in peripherally chemodenervated rabbits during hypoxia (fR; P < 0.05, VT; P < 0.05 and VE; P < 0.01). After ICV injection of ketanserin, the enhancement of 5-HT on VE was prevented during normoxia. On the breathing of hypoxic gas after ICV ketanserin, the degree of AHVD was augmented. In conclusion, our findings suggested that central 5-HT increases normoxic ventilation and reduces the degree of AHVD during hypoxia and that ICV ketanserin prevents the stimulatory effect of 5-HT on respiration and augments AHVD.  相似文献   

17.
Airway anesthesia with inhaled aerosolized lidocaine has been associated with increases in minute ventilation (VE) and mean inspiratory flow rate (VT/TI) during CO2 inhalation. However, it is unclear whether these increases are local effects of the anesthesia or systemic effects of absorbed and circulating lidocaine. To evaluate this 20 normal subjects were treated on separate days with aerosolized lidocaine, intravenous lidocaine, aerosolized control solution, or intravenous control solution, and the effects of each treatment on VE and VT/TI were determined and compared during room-air breathing and inhalation of 5% CO2-95% O2. None of the treatments altered VE or VT/TI during room-air breathing. Aerosolized lidocaine produced small (5.9-6.0%) increases in VE and VT/TI during CO2 inhalation, but these effects were not present after intravenous lidocaine despite equivalent lidocaine blood levels. We concluded that the increases in VE and VT/TI after aerosolized lidocaine were local effects of airway anesthesia rather than systemic effects of absorbed and circulating lidocaine.  相似文献   

18.
Hypoxic and hypercapnic ventilatory responses were measured after two levels of acute inhalation of cigarette smoke, minimum-level nicotine smoke (smoke 1) and nicotine-containing smoke (smoke 2), in 10 normal men. Chemosensitivity to hypoxia and hypercapnia was assessed both in terms of slope factors for ventilation-alveolar PO2 curve (A) and ventilation-alveolar PCO2 line (S) and of absolute levels of minute ventilation (VE) at hypoxia or hypercapnia. Ventilatory response to hypoxia and absolute level of VE at hypoxia significantly increased from 23.5 +/- 22.6 (SD) to 38.6 +/- 31.3 l . min-1 . Torr and from 10.6 +/- 2.5 to 12.6 +/- 3.5 l . min-1, respectively, during inhalation of cigarette smoke 2 (P less than 0.05). Inhalation of cigarette smoke 2 tended to increase the ventilatory response to hypercapnia, and the absolute level of VE at hypercapnia rose from 1.42 +/- 0.75 to 1.65 +/- 0.58 l . min-1 . Torr-1 and from 23.7 +/- 4.9 to 25.5 +/- 5.9 l . min-1, respectively, but these changes did not attain significant levels. Cigarette smoke 2 inhalation induced an increase in heart rate from 64.7 +/- 5.7 to 66.4 +/- 6.3 beats . min-1 (P less than 0.05) during room air breathing, whereas resting ventilation and specific airway conductance did not change significantly. On the other hand, acute inhalation of cigarette smoke 1 changed none of these variables. These results indicate that hypoxic chemosensitivity is augmented after cigarette smoke and that nicotine is presumed to act on peripheral chemoreceptors.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Amyothrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a progressive, lethal neuromuscular disease that is associated with the degeneration of cortical and spinal motoneurons, leading to atrophy of limb, axial, and respiratory muscles. Patients with ALS invariably develop respiratory muscle weakness and most die from pulmonary complications. Overexpression of superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) gene mutations in mice recapitulates several of the clinical and pathological characteristics of ALS and is therefore a valuable tool to study this disease. The present study is intended to evaluate an age-dependent progression of respiratory complications in SOD1(G93A) mutant mice. In each animal, baseline measurements of breathing pattern [i.e., breathing frequency and tidal volume (VT)], minute ventilation (VE), and metabolism (i.e., oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production) were repeatedly sampled at variable time points between 10 and 20 wk of age with the use of whole-body plethysmographic chambers. To further characterize the neurodegeneration of breathing, VE was also measured during 5-min challenges of hypercapnia (5% CO(2)) and hypoxia (10% O(2)). At baseline, breathing characteristics and metabolism remained relatively unchanged from 10 to 14 wk of age. From 14 to 18 wk of age, there were significant (P < 0.05) increases in baseline VT, VE, and the ventilatory equivalent (VE/oxygen consumption). After 18 wk of age, there was a rapid decline in VE due to significant (P < 0.05) reductions in both breathing frequency and VT. Whereas little change in hypoxic VE responses occurred between 10 and 18 wk, hypercapnic VE responses were significantly (P < 0.05) elevated at 18 wk due to an augmented VT response. Like baseline breathing characteristics, hypercapnic VE responses also declined rapidly after 18 wk of age. The phenotypic profile of SOD1(G93A) mutant mice was apparently unique because similar changes in respiration and metabolism were not observed in SOD1 controls. The present results outline the magnitude and time course of respiratory complications in SOD1(G93A) mutant mice as the progression of disease occurs in this mouse model of ALS.  相似文献   

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