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1.
We examined the effect of sudden withdrawal of respiratory oscillations of arterial PCO2 (CO2 oscillations) at resting metabolic rate on the control of respiration in 11 anesthetized paralyzed vagotomized dogs in normoxic normocapnia. A double-lumen endotracheal tube was inserted so that the left and right lungs were ventilated independently. By alternately ventilating each lung, we could completely abolish CO2 oscillations without affecting the mean blood gas levels (withdrawal of CO2 oscillations). The CO2 oscillation was calculated from arterial pH oscillation measured by a rapidly responding intra-arterial pH electrode. Respiratory center output was monitored by use of a moving time average of the phrenic neurogram. A 3-min period of withdrawal of CO2 oscillations was bracketed by two control periods (simultaneous ventilation of lungs for 3 min) to avoid the confounding effect of the baseline drift in the respiratory center output. The amplitude of the CO2 oscillations in the control was 2.33 +/- 0.89 (SD) Torr. When the difference in the mean level of arterial PCO2 between the control and withdrawal of CO2 oscillations was minimized (-0.09 +/- 0.54 Torr; P greater than 0.25), we found negligible change in the minute phrenic activity during withdrawal of CO2 oscillations (-0.02 +/- 6.11% of the control, P greater than 0.98, n = 49; 99% confidence interval -2.36 to 2.32%). Thus we conclude that the maintenance of normal respiration at rest is not critically dependent on a phasic afferent input to the respiratory center arising from respiratory CO2 oscillations.  相似文献   

2.
Ventilatory kinetics during exercise (30 W for 6 min) were studied in 3 asthmatics, 14 patients with chronic airway obstruction (11 with bronchial or type B disease, 3 with emphysematous or type A disease), and in 5 normal age-matched controls. The measure of ventilatory increase during early exercise, alpha 1-3%, was calculated as (avg minute ventilation over 1st-3rd min of exercise--resting minute ventilation)/(avg minute ventilation over 4th-6th min of exercise--resting minute ventilation) X 100. Arterial pH, PO2, and PCO2 (PaCO2) were measured in vitro at rest and within 20 s of termination of exercise. Respiratory PaCO2 oscillations had previously been monitored at rest in the patients (indirectly as in vivo arterial pH, using a fast-response pH electrode) and quantified by upslope (delta PaCO2/delta t). alpha 1-3% was normal in asthmatics (whose respiratory oscillations as a group showed least attenuation) and in type A patients (whose respiratory oscillations as a group were most attenuated). In type B patients reduction in alpha 1-3% correlated with attenuation of delta PaCO2/delta t (r = 0.75; P less than 0.01). There was no significant correlation between delta PaCO2/delta t and change of in vitro PaCO2 from rest to the immediate postexercise period. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that attenuation of delta PaCO2/delta t slows ventilatory kinetics during exercise in type B but not type A patients. Intact respiratory oscillations are not necessary for CO2 homeostasis after the first few minutes of exercise.  相似文献   

3.
For disease states characterized by oscillatory ventilation, an ideal dynamic therapy would apply a counteracting oscillation in ventilation. Modulating respiratory gas transport through the circulation might allow this. We explore the ability of repetitive alternations in heart rate, using a cardiac pacemaker, to elicit oscillations in respiratory variables and discuss the potential for therapeutic exploitation. By incorporating acute cardiac output manipulations into an integrated mathematical model, we observed that a rise in cardiac output should yield a gradual rise in end-tidal CO2 and, subsequently, ventilation. An alternating pattern of cardiac output might, therefore, create oscillations in CO2 and ventilation. We studied the effect of repeated alternations in heart rate of 30 beats/min with periodicity of 60 s, on cardiac output, respiratory gases, and ventilation in 22 subjects with implanted cardiac pacemakers and stable breathing patterns. End-tidal CO2 and ventilation developed consistent oscillations with a period of 60 s during the heart rate alternations, with mean peak-to-trough relative excursions of 8.4 +/- 5.0% (P < 0.0001) and 24.4 +/- 18.8% (P < 0.0001), respectively. Furthermore, we verified the mathematical prediction that the amplitude of these oscillations would depend on those in cardiac output (r = 0.59, P = 0.001). Repetitive alternations in heart rate can elicit reproducible oscillations in end-tidal CO2 and ventilation. The size of this effect depends on the magnitude of the cardiac output response. Harnessed and timed appropriately, this cardiorespiratory mechanism might be exploited to create an active dynamic responsive pacing algorithm to counteract spontaneous respiratory oscillations, such as those causing apneic breathing disorders.  相似文献   

4.
Carbon dioxide effects on the ventilatory response to sustained hypoxia   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We examined the interrelation between CO2 and the ventilatory response to moderate (80% arterial saturation) sustained hypoxia in normal young adults. On a background of continuous CO2-stimulated hyperventilation, hypoxia was introduced and sustained for 25 min. Initially, with the introduction of hypoxia onto hypercapnia, there was a brisk additional increase in inspiratory minute ventilation (VI) to 284% of resting VI, but the response was not sustained and hypoxic VI declined by 36% to a level intermediate between the initial increase and the preexisting hypercapnic hyperventilation. Through the continuous hypercapnia, the changes in hypoxic ventilation resulted from significant alterations in tidal volume (VT) and mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI) without changes in respiratory timing. In another experiment, sustained hypoxia was introduced on the usual background of room air, either with isocapnia or without maintenance of end-tidal CO2 (ETCO2) (poikilocapnic hypoxia). Regardless of the degree of maintenance of ETCO2, during 25 min of sustained hypoxia, VI showed an initial brisk increase and then declined by 35-40% of resting VI to a level intermediate between the initial response and resting room air VI. For both isocapnia and poikilocapnic conditions, the attenuation of VI was an expression of a diminished VT. Thus the decline in ventilation with sustained hypoxia occurred regardless of the background ETCO2, suggesting that the mechanism underlying the hypoxic decline is independent of CO2.  相似文献   

5.
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   

6.
Traditionally, the increase in ventilation occurring after approximately 4 s of CO2 inhalation in preterm infants has been attributed to an action at the peripheral chemoreceptors. However, on a few occasions, we have observed a short apnea (2-3 s) in response to 3-5% CO2 in these infants. To test the hypothesis that this apnea reflects a respiratory sensory reflex to CO2, we gave nine preterm infants [birth wt 1.5 +/- 0.1 (SE) kg, gestational age 31 +/- 1 wk] 7-8% CO2 while they breathed 21% O2. To study the dose-response relationship, we also gave 2, 4, 6, and 8% CO2 to another group of seven preterm infants (birth wt 1.5 +/- 0.1 kg, gestational age 31 +/- 1 wk). In the first group of infants, minute ventilation during 21% O2 breathing (0.232 +/- 0.022 l.min-1.kg-1) decreased after CO2 administration (0.140 +/- 0.022, P < 0.01) and increased with CO2 removal (0.380 +/- 0.054, P < 0.05). This decrease in ventilation was related to an apnea (12 +/- 2.6 s) occurring 7.7 +/- 0.8 s after the beginning of CO2 inhalation. There was no significant change in tidal volume. In the second group of infants, minute ventilation increased during administration of 2, 4, and 6% CO2 but decreased during 8% CO2 because of the presence of an apnea. These findings suggest that inhalation of a high concentration of CO2 (> 6%) inhibits breathing through a respiratory sensory reflex, as described in adult cats (H. A. Boushey and P. S. Richardson. J. Physiol. Lond. 228: 181-191, 1973).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
In animals that rely on the respiratory system for both gas exchange and heat loss, exercise can generate conflict between chemoregulation and thermoregulation. We hypothesized that in panting animals, hypocapnia during hyperthermic exercise reflects a reduction in the arterial CO2 tension (Pa(CO2)) set point. To test this hypothesis, five sheep were subjected to tracheal insufflations of CO2 or air (control) at 3-4 L min(-1) in 3 min bouts at 5 min intervals over 31 min of exercise. During exercise, rectal temperature and minute ventilation (V(E)) rose continuously while Pa(CO2) fell from 35.4+/-3.1 to 18.6+/-2.9 Torr and 34.3+/-2.4 to 18.7+/-1.5 Torr in air and CO2 trials, respectively. Air insufflations did not affect V(E) or Pa(CO2). V(E) increased during CO2 insufflations via a shift to higher tidal volume and lower frequency. CO2 insufflations also increased Pa(CO2), although not above the pre-exercise level. Within 5 min after each CO2 insufflation, Pa(CO2) had decreased to match that following the equivalent air insufflation. These results are consistent with a reduced Pa(CO2) set point or an increased gain of the Pa(CO2) regulatory system during hyperthermic exercise. Either change in the control of Pa(CO2) could facilitate respiratory evaporative heat loss by mitigating homeostatic conflict.  相似文献   

8.
Ventilatory response to graded external dead space (0.5, 1.0, 2.0, and 2.5 liters) with hyperoxia and CO2 steady-state inhalation (3, 5, 7, and 8% CO2 in O2) was studied before and after 4% lidocaine aerosol inhalation in nine healthy males. The mean ventilatory response (delta VE/delta PETCO2, where VE is minute ventilation and PETCO2 is end-tidal PCO2) to graded dead space before airway anesthesia was 10.2 +/- 4.6 (SD) l.min-1.Torr-1, which was significantly greater than the steady-state CO2 response (1.4 +/- 0.6 l.min-1.Torr-1, P less than 0.001). Dead-space loading produced greater oscillation in airway PCO2 than did CO2 gas loading. After airway anesthesia, ventilatory response to graded dead space decreased significantly, to 2.1 +/- 0.6 l.min-1.Torr-1 (P less than 0.01) but was still greater than that to CO2. The response to CO2 did not significantly differ (1.3 +/- 0.5 l.min-1.Torr-1). Tidal volume, mean inspiratory flow, respiratory frequency, inspiratory time, and expiratory time during dead-space breathing were also depressed after airway anesthesia, particularly during large dead-space loading. On the other hand, during CO2 inhalation, these respiratory variables did not significantly differ before and after airway anesthesia. These results suggest that in conscious humans vagal airway receptors play a role in the ventilatory response to graded dead space and control of the breathing pattern during dead-space loading by detecting the oscillation in airway PCO2. These receptors do not appear to contribute to the ventilatory response to inhaled CO2.  相似文献   

9.
We examined the degree to which ventilatory sensitivity to rising body temperature (the slope of the regression line relating ventilation and body temperature) is altered by restoration of arterial PCO(2) to the eucapnic level during prolonged exercise in the heat. Thirteen subjects exercised for ~60 min on a cycle ergometer at 50% of peak O(2) uptake with and without inhalation of CO(2)-enriched air. Subjects began breathing CO(2)-enriched air at the point that end-tidal Pco(2) started to decline. Esophageal temperature (T(es)), minute ventilation (V(E)), tidal volume (V(T)), respiratory frequency (f(R)), respiratory gases, middle cerebral artery blood velocity, and arterial blood pressure were recorded continuously. When V(E), V(T), f(R), and ventilatory equivalents for O(2) uptake (V(E)/VO(2)) and CO(2) output (V(E)/VCO(2)) were plotted against changes in T(es) from the start of the CO(2)-enriched air inhalation (ΔT(es)), the slopes of the regression lines relating V(E), V(T), V(E)/VO(2), and V(E)/VCO(2) to ΔT(es) (ventilatory sensitivity to rising body temperature) were significantly greater when subjects breathed CO(2)-enriched air than when they breathed room air (V(E): 19.8 ± 10.3 vs. 8.9 ± 6.7 l·min(-1)·°C(-1), V(T): 18 ± 120 vs. -81 ± 92 ml/°C; V(E)/VO(2): 7.4 ± 5.5 vs. 2.6 ± 2.3 units/°C, and V(E)/VCO(2): 7.6 ± 6.6 vs. 3.4 ± 2.8 units/°C). The increase in Ve was accompanied by increases in V(T) and f(R). These results suggest that restoration of arterial PCO(2) to nearly eucapnic levels increases ventilatory sensitivity to rising body temperature by around threefold.  相似文献   

10.
We examined the effects of carotid body denervation on ventilatory responses to normoxia (21% O2 in N2 for 240 s), hypoxic hypoxia (10 and 15% O2 in N2 for 90 and 120 s, respectively), and hyperoxic hypercapnia (5% CO2 in O2 for 240 s) in the spontaneously breathing urethane-anesthetized mouse. Respiratory measurements were made with a whole body, single-chamber plethysmograph before and after cutting both carotid sinus nerves. Baseline measurements in air showed that carotid body denervation was accompanied by lower minute ventilation with a reduction in respiratory frequency. On the basis of measurements with an open-circuit system, no significant differences in O2 consumption or CO2 production before and after chemodenervation were found. During both levels of hypoxia, animals with intact sinus nerves had increased respiratory frequency, tidal volume, and minute ventilation; however, after chemodenervation, animals experienced a drop in respiratory frequency and ventilatory depression. Tidal volume responses during 15% hypoxia were similar before and after carotid body denervation; during 10% hypoxia in chemodenervated animals, there was a sudden increase in tidal volume with an increase in the rate of inspiration, suggesting that gasping occurred. During hyperoxic hypercapnia, ventilatory responses were lower with a smaller tidal volume after chemodenervation than before. We conclude that the carotid bodies are essential for maintaining ventilation during eupnea, hypoxia, and hypercapnia in the anesthetized mouse.  相似文献   

11.
This study was undertaken to measure the neonate's response to CO-induced hypoxia in the first 10 days of life. CO breathing was used to induce hypoxia because CO causes tissue hypoxia with no or minimal chemoreceptor stimulation. An inspired gas mixture of 0.25 to 0.5% CO in air was used to raise the blood carboxyhemoglobin (HbCO) progressively from 0 to 60% over approximately 20 min. The study, conducted in awake conscious lambs aged 2 and 10 days, consisted in measuring the response of ventilation and the change in arterial blood gases during the rise of HbCO. The results showed that the 2- and 10-day-old lambs tolerated very high HbCO levels without an increase in minute ventilation (VE) and without metabolic acidosis. At both ages, HbCO caused no VE change until HbCO levels rose to between 45 and 50% after which the VE change was exponential in some animals but minimal in others. The VE change was brought about by a rise in tidal volume and respiratory frequency. During the period of maturation from 2 to 10 days, there was a small shift to the right in the VE-HbCO response. In the 10-day-old lambs the VE response to high HbCO was greater than that of the 2-day-olds because of the lambs' higher respiratory frequency response. Six of the 10-day-old lambs but only two of the 2-day-old lambs showed a hypoxic tachypnea to HbCO of 55-65%. None of the lambs developed periodic breathing, dysrhythmic breathing, or recurrent apneas with an HbCO level as high as 60%.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
The aim of this study was to demonstrate that the medullary respiratory rhythm generator is capable of entraining to respiratory oscillations of arterial PCO2 (CO2 oscillations). We used 10 anesthetized, paralyzed, vagotomized, and mechanically ventilated dogs. First, rate of mechanical ventilation was manually adjusted so that it matched the dog's spontaneous respiratory rate, which established a constant phase relationship between the mechanical ventilation and the burst of phrenic neurogram (initial phase). Then this phase relationship was temporally disturbed by a brief electrical stimulation of the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN). In the control group, the initial phase and the steady-state phase relationship after SLN stimulation were randomly distributed within the phase plane, implying no interaction between the respiratory center and mechanical ventilation. In contrast, when CO2 output from the lung was increased 2.6-fold above the control level by venous CO2 loading, the initial phase and the steady-state phase after SLN stimulation were locked in such a way that the onset of the burst of phrenic neurogram coincided with the peak of CO2 oscillations. This was not demonstrated when the dog was made hyperoxic. We therefore conclude that the respiratory center could entrain to phasic chemical afferent inputs originating from CO2 oscillations, provided they are considerably amplified.  相似文献   

13.
To determine the importance of nonhumoral drives to exercise hyperpnea in birds, we exercised adult White Pekin ducks on a treadmill (3 degrees incline) at 1.44 km X h-1 for 15 min during unidirectional artificial ventilation. Intrapulmonary gas concentrations and arterial blood gases could be regulated with this ventilation procedure while allowing ventilatory effort to be measured during both rest and exercise. Ducks were ventilated with gases containing either 4.0 or 5.0% CO2 in 19% O2 (balance N2) at a flow rate of 12 l X min-1. At that flow rate, arterial CO2 partial pressure (PaCO2) could be maintained within +/- 2 Torr of resting values throughout exercise. Arterial O2 partial pressure did not change significantly with exercise. Heart rate, mean arterial blood pressure, and mean right ventricular pressure increased significantly during exercise. On the average, minute ventilation (used as an indicator of the output from the central nervous system) increased approximately 400% over resting levels because of an increase in both tidal volume and respiratory frequency. CO2-sensitivity curves were obtained for each bird during rest. If the CO2 sensitivity remained unchanged during exercise, then the observed 1.5 Torr increase in PaCO2 during exercise would account for only about 6% of the total increase in ventilation over resting levels. During exercise, arterial [H+] increased approximately 4 nmol X l-1; this increase could account for about 18% of the total rise in ventilation. We conclude that only a minor component of the exercise hyperpnea in birds can be accounted for by a humoral mechanism; other factors, possibly from muscle afferents, appear responsible for most of the hyperpnea observed in the running duck.  相似文献   

14.
To examine the role of the laryngeal reflex in modulating cardiorespiratory function, we stimulated the superior laryngeal nerves (SLN) bilaterally in unanesthetized, chronically instrumented piglets (n = 10, age 5-14 days). The SLN were placed in cuff electrodes and wires were exteriorized in the neck for stimulation. A cannula placed in the aorta was used for blood pressure recording and arterial blood sampling. During each experiment, 1-2 days after surgery, ventilation was recorded using whole-body plethysmography, and electroencephalogram and electrocardiogram were recorded after acute subcutaneous electrode placement. After base-line recordings, the SLN were electrically stimulated for 1 h. During this period, mean respiratory frequency decreased by 40-75% and apneas of 10-15 s were regularly interspersed between single breaths or clusters of breaths. Periods of breathing were always associated with opening of the eyes and generally with head and body movements, an awakening that occurred every 10-15 s. At 1 h into the stimulus period, minute ventilation had decreased by 57 +/- 7% (mean +/- SE), arterial partial pressure of O2 (PaO2) by 68 +/- 3 Torr, and arterial partial pressure of CO2 (PaCO2) had increased by 19 +/- 2 Torr. Throughout the entire stimulus period, mean blood pressure and average heart rate were maintained within 12% of base line. We suggest that: low-threshold SLN afferents exert primarily respiratory effects and only minor cardiovascular effects; breathing during laryngeal reflex activation is sustained by an arousal system; and the laryngeal reflex does not pose an imminent threat to the unanesthetized, awake, young animal.  相似文献   

15.
The effects of body position on ventilatory responses to chemical stimuli have rarely been studied in experimental animals, despite evidence that position may be a factor in respiratory results. The purpose of this study was to test whether body position could affect acute ventilatory responses to 4-min periods of moderate hypercapnia (5% CO(2) in O(2)) and poikilocapnic hypoxia (15% O(2) in N(2)) in the urethane-anaesthetised mouse. Respiratory measurements were conducted with mice in the prone and supine positions with a whole-body, single-chamber plethysmograph. During hypoxia, the time course of minute ventilation (V (E)) was similar in the two positions, but the breathing pattern was different. After the response peak, V (E) depended on respiratory frequency (f) and tidal volume (V(T)) in the prone position but mainly on V(T) in the supine position. In the supine position, f declined below the baseline values toward the end of hypoxic exposure. During hypercapnia, there were no ventilatory differences between the prone and supine positions. Brief hypoxic exposure elicited f depression in the supine position in the anaesthetised mouse. The depressive effect on f suggests that the supine position may not be optimal for sustaining ventilation, particularly during hypoxia.  相似文献   

16.
Ventilatory responses (VRs) were measured via a sealed face mask and pneumotachograph in 30 unsedated, mixed-breed miniature piglets at 12.6 +/- 2.3 days of age (day 1) and then repeated after seven daily 24-min exposures to 10% O(2)-6% CO(2) [hypercapnic hypoxia (HH)]. Arterial blood was sampled at baseline, after 10 min of exposure, and after 10 min of recovery. VRs included hypoxia (10% O(2) in N(2)), hypercapnia (6% CO(2) in air), and HH (10% O(2)-6% CO(2)-balance N(2)). Treatment groups (n = 10 each) were exposed to 24 min of HH from day 2 to 8 as sustained HH (24 min of HH and then 24 min of air) or cyclic HH (4 min of HH alternating with 4 min of air). Day 1 and 9 data were compared in treatment and control groups. After cyclic HH, respiratory responses to CO(2) were reduced during hypercapnia and during HH (P < 0.001 vs. control for minute ventilation in both). In both treatment groups, time to peak minute ventilation was delayed in hypoxia (P = 0.02, ANOVA), and response amplitude was increased (P < 0.001 and P = 0.003, sustained and cyclic HH, respectively, vs. control). Respiratory pattern was also altered during the VRs and among treatment groups. Stimulus presentation characteristics exert effects on VRs that are independent of those elicited by daily HH.  相似文献   

17.
In five anesthetized patients with a Jarvik-7 artificial heart, pulmonary volume displacements generated by cardiogenic oscillations were measured using an indirect spirometric method. Consequences on gas exchange were also evaluated during a 15-min period of apnea by use of a tracheal insufflation of pure O2 at a constant flow rate of 20 l/min. The Jarvik-7 artificial heart generated a mean pulmonary volume displacement of 105 +/- 29 (SD) ml/heart beat. After 15 min of apnea, arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) significantly increased from 29 +/- 5 to 47 +/- 6 (SD) Torr. PaCO2 increased by 0.8 Torr/min from the 5th to the 15th min of apnea. Mean arterial PO2, mean pulmonary shunt, mean O2 consumption, and mean metabolic production of CO2 did not change significantly during the apnea period. Because cardiac output was kept constant during the study, O2 transport was adequately maintained throughout the apnea period. In patient 1, where the period of apnea was continued for 60 min, PaCO2 progressively increased until the 45th min and then remained stable at 61 Torr during the last 15 min of apnea. This "plateau" corresponded to an alveolar ventilation of 3,907 ml/min, representing 69% of the alveolar ventilation calculated during conventional mechanical ventilation. In conclusion, the Jarvik-7 artificial heart provides a potent respiratory support through the cardiogenic oscillations it generates.  相似文献   

18.
It is known, that spectral analysis of heart rate and respiratory variability allows to find out the very low frequency (VLF) rhythm. However it is not known, it is necessary to carry this rhythm to what type of wave processes. The purpose of the present researches was to study the respiratory variability and the variability of gas exchange parameters. 10 healthy subjects have been surveyed. The pneumogramms within 30 minutes spent record, and then a method "breath-by-breath" within 30 minutes registered gas exchange parameters (Ve--lung ventilation, V(O2) -O2 consumption and other parameters). Fast Fourier transform method has found out two groups of the basic peaks. The first--in a range 0.2-0.3 Hz (a time cycle--3-5 s), that corresponds respiratory frequency which size at subjects varied from 12 to 20 per minute. The second--in a range 0.002-0.0075 Hz, that corresponds VLF diapason (a time cycle--1-3.5 minutes). At the analysis pneumogramms rhythms in the same ranges have been established. The carried out researches allow to draw a conclusion on steady character of wave process in a VLF-range. It can be carried to quasi-periodic oscillations type. First oscillator or respiratory frequency it is formed by means of mechanisms of chemoreception. Considering, that V(O2) and V(CO2) are function energy exchange, it is possible to believe, what exactly energy demand define the second oscillator.  相似文献   

19.
Glia are thought to regulate ion homeostasis, including extracellular pH; however, their role in modulating central CO2 chemosensitivity is unclear. Using a push-pull cannula in chronically instrumented and conscious rats, we administered a glial toxin, fluorocitrate (FC; 1 mM) into the retrotrapezoid nucleus (RTN), a putative chemosensitive site, during normocapnia and hypercapnia. FC exposure significantly increased expired minute ventilation (VE) to a value 38% above the control level during normocapnia. During hypercapnia, FC also significantly increased both breathing frequency and expired VE. During FC administration, maximal ventilation was achieved at approximately 4% CO2, compared with 8-10% CO2 during control hypercapnic trials. RTN perfusion of control solutions had little effect on any ventilatory measures (VE, tidal volume, or breathing frequency) during normocapnic or hypercapnic conditions. We conclude that unilateral impairment of glial function in the RTN of the conscious rat results in stimulation of respiratory output.  相似文献   

20.
The contribution of ruminal CO2 to gas exchange measurements and ventilation was determined in four rumen-fistulated Hereford steers at rest and during exercise. The calves were exercised at 1.4 and 2.2m X s-1 under three treatments: 1)full rumen with fistula sealed, 2) full rumen with fistula open, and 3) empty rumen. Measurements also were made at rest while flushing the empty rumen with either 100% N2 or a mixture of 50% CO2-50% N2. O2 consumption, CO2 production (Mco2), and ventilation were measured by collecting the expired gas. Absorption across the ruminal epithelium during rest increased Mco2 by 3%, whereas absorption and eructation together increased Mco2 by 15%. The respiratory exchange ratio (R) was significantly different among the three treatments at rest, but no differences were observed in R among the treatments during exercise. No changes were observed in minute ventilation among the three conditions, but a decrease in respiratory frequency and an increase in tidal volume occurred when the rumen was empty. These changes in ventilatory pattern may have been due to a decrease in body temperature when the rumen was empty. When the empty rumen was flushed with 50% CO2, Mco2 was increased 21% over the value observed when flushing with 100% N2. CO2 of fermentation origin is added to the expired gas by both eructation and absorption and has a significant effect on R in the resting animal, but no effect on R during exercise.  相似文献   

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