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1.
In six normal male subjects we compared the O2 cost of resistive breathing (VO2 resp) between equivalent external inspiratory (IRL) and expiratory loads (ERL) studied separately. Each subject performed four pairs of runs matched for tidal volume, breathing frequency, flow rates, lung volume, pressure-time product, and work rate. Basal O2 uptake, measured before and after pairs of loaded runs, was subtracted from that measured during resistive breathing to obtain VO2 resp. For an equivalent load, the VO2 resp during ERL (184 +/- 17 ml O2/min) was nearly twice that obtained during IRL (97 +/- 9 ml O2/min). This twofold difference in efficiency between inspiratory and expiratory resistive breathing may reflect the relatively lower mechanical advantage of the expiratory muscles in overcoming respiratory loads. Variable recruitment of expiratory muscles may explain the large variation of results obtained in studies of respiratory muscle efficiency in normal subjects.  相似文献   

2.
In healthy subjects, we compared the effects of an expiratory (ERL) and an inspiratory (IRL) resistive load (6 cmH2O.l-1.s) with no added resistive load on the pattern of respiratory muscle recruitment during exercise. Fifteen male subjects performed three exercise tests at 40% of maximum O2 uptake: 1) with no-added-resistive load (control), 2) with ERL, and 3) with IRL. In all subjects, we measured breathing pattern and mouth occlusion pressure (P0.1) from the 3rd min of exercise, in 10 subjects O2 uptake (VO2), CO2 output (VCO2), and respiratory exchange ratio (R), and in 5 subjects we measured gastric (Pga), pleural (Ppl), and transdiaphragmatic (Pdi) pressures. Both ERL and IRL induced a high increase of P0.1 and a decrease of minute ventilation. ERL induced a prolongation of expiratory time with a reduction of inspiratory time (TI), mean expiratory flow, and ratio of inspiratory to total time of the respiratory cycle (TI/TT). IRL induced a prolongation of TI with a decrease of mean inspiratory flow and an increase of tidal volume and TI/TT. With ERL, in two subjects, Pga increased and Ppl decreased more during inspiration than during control suggesting that the diaphragm was the most active muscle. In one subject, the increases of Ppl and Pga were weak; thus Pdi increased very little. In the two other subjects, Ppl decreased more during inspiration but Pga also decreased, leading to a decrease of Pdi. This suggests a recruitment of abdominal muscles during expiration and of accessory and intercostal muscles during inspiration. With IRL, in all subjects, Ppl again decreased more, Pga began to decrease until 40% of TI and then increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

3.
To study the changes in ventilation induced by inspiratory flow-resistive (IFR) loads, we applied moderate and severe IFR loads in chronically instrumented and awake sheep. We measured inspired minute ventilation (VI), ventilatory pattern [inspiratory time (TI), expiratory time (TE), respiratory cycle time (TT), tidal volume (VT), mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI), and respiratory duty cycle (TI/TT)], transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi), functional residual capacity (FRC), blood gas tensions, and recorded diaphragmatic electromyogram. With both moderate and severe loads, Pdi, TI, and TI/TT increased, TE, TT, VT, VT/TI, and VI decreased, and hypercapnia ensued. FRC did not change significantly with moderate loads but decreased by 30-40% with severe loads. With severe loads, arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) stabilized at approximately 60 Torr within 10-15 min and rose further to levels exceeding 80 Torr when Pdi dropped. This was associated with a lengthening in TE and a decrease in breathing frequency, VI, and TI/TT. We conclude that 1) timing and volume responses to IFR loads are not sufficient to prevent alveolar hypoventilation, 2) with severe loads the considerable increase in Pdi, TI/TT, and PaCO2 may reduce respiratory muscle endurance, and 3) the changes in ventilation associated with neuromuscular fatigue occur after the drop in Pdi. We believe that these ventilatory changes are dictated by the mechanical capability of the respiratory muscles or induced by a decrease in central neural output to these muscles or both.  相似文献   

4.
Influence of lung volume on oxygen cost of resistive breathing   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We examined the relationship between the O2 cost of breathing (VO2 resp) and lung volume at constant load, ventilation, work rate, and pressure-time product in five trained normal subjects breathing through an inspiratory resistance at functional residual capacity (FRC) and when lung volume (VL) was increased to 37 +/- 2% (mean +/- SE) of inspiratory capacity (high VL). High VL was maintained using continuous positive airway pressure of 9 +/- 2 cmH2O and with the subjects coached to relax during expiration to minimize respiratory muscle activity. Six paired runs were performed in each subject at constant tidal volume (0.62 +/- 0.2 liters), frequency (23 +/- 1 breaths/min), inspiratory flow rate (0.45 +/- 0.1 l/s), and inspiratory muscle pressure (45 +/- 2% of maximum static pressure at FRC). VO2 resp increased from 109 +/- 15 ml/min at FRC by 41 +/- 11% at high VL (P less than 0.05). Thus the efficiency of breathing at high VL (3.9 +/- 0.2%) was less than that at FRC (5.2 +/- 0.3%, P less than 0.01). The decrease in inspiratory muscle efficiency at high VL may be due to changes in mechanical coupling, in the pattern of recruitment of the respiratory muscles, or in the intrinsic properties of the inspiratory muscles at shorter length. When the work of breathing at high VL was normalized for the decrease in maximum inspiratory muscle pressure with VL, efficiency at high VL (5.2 +/- 0.3%) did not differ from that at FRC (P less than 0.7), suggesting that the fall in efficiency may have been related to the fall in inspiratory muscle strength. During acute hyperinflation the decreased efficiency contributes to the increased O2 cost of breathing and may contribute to the diminished inspiratory muscle endurance.  相似文献   

5.
We examined the relationship between the pressure-time product (Pdt) of the inspiratory muscles and the O2 cost of breathing (VO2 resp) in five normal subjects breathing through an external inspiratory resistance with a tidal volume of 800 ml at a constant end-expiratory lung volume [functional residual capacity, (FRC)]. Each subject performed 30-40 runs, each of approximately 30 breaths, with inspiratory flow rates ranging from 0.26 +/- 0.01 to 0.89 +/- 0.04 l/s (means +/- SE) and inspiratory mouth pressures ranging from 10 +/- 1 to 68 +/- 4% of the maximum inspiratory pressure at FRC. In all subjects VO2 resp was linearly related to Pdt when mean inspiratory flow (VI) was constant, but the slope of this relationship increased with increasing VI. Therefore, Pdt is an accurate index of VO2 resp only when VI is constant. There was a linear relationship between the VO2 resp and the work rate across the external resistance (W) for all runs in each subject over the range of W 10 +/- 1 to 137 +/- 21 J/min. Thus, at a constant tidal volume the VO2 resp was related to the mean inspiratory pressure, independent of flow or inspiratory duration. If the VO2 resp were determined mainly during inspiration, then for a given rate of external work or O2 consumption, VI would be inversely related to mean inspiratory pressure. Efficiency (E) was 2.1 +/- 0.2% and constant over a large range of VI, pressure, work rate, or resistance and was not altered by the presence of a potentially fatiguing load. The constant E over such a wide range of conditions implies a complex integration of the recruitment, mechanical function, and energy consumption of the muscles utilized in breathing.  相似文献   

6.
Mean inspiratory pressure (Pi), estimated from the occlusion pressure at the mouth and the inspiratory time, is useful as a noninvasive estimate of respiratory muscle effort during spontaneous breathing in normal subjects and patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The aim of this study was to compare the Pi with respect to mean esophageal pressure (Pes) in patients with restrictive disorders. Eleven healthy volunteers, 12 patients with chest wall disease, 14 patients with usual interstitial pneumonia, and 17 patients with neuromuscular diseases were studied. Pi, Pes, and mean transdiaphragmatic pressure were simultaneously measured. Tension-time indexes of diaphragm (TTdi) and inspiratory muscles (TTmu) were also determined. In neuromuscular patients, significant correlations were found between Pi and Pes, Pi and transdiaphragmatic pressure, and TTmu and TTdi. A moderate agreement between Pi and Pes and between TTmu and TTdi was found. No significant correlation between these parameters was found in the other patient groups. These findings suggest that Pi is a good surrogate for the invasive measurement of respiratory muscle effort during spontaneous breathing in neuromuscular patients.  相似文献   

7.
Bellemare and Grassino (J. Appl. Physiol. 53: 1196-1206, 1982) have reported that the diphragmatic time-tension index (TTdi) (i.e., the product of mean transdiaphragmatic pressure/maximum transdiaphragmatic pressure and the inspiratory duty cycle) can be used as a predictor of diaphragmatic fatigue in humans. However, the publications of these authors do not directly address the question of whether inspiratory flow or transdiaphragmatic pressure should be used to calculate the inspiratory duty cycle. To gather data on this point, we computed TTdi by both methods in spontaneously breathing normal adult males (AMN) and age-matched males with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) at rest and during treadmill exercise. During rest and exercise in both AMN and COPD, the fraction of the breathing cycle over which diaphragmatic tension was maintained (Tdi/TT) exceeded the fraction of the breathing cycle over which inspiratory airflow was maintained (TI/TT). Therefore, TTdi calculations using Tdi/TT were greater (P less than 0.05) than TTdi computations using TI/TT. However, this difference in TTdi values was relatively small (approximately 15%).  相似文献   

8.
Maximum relaxation rate (MRR) and the time constant of relaxation (tau) of transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) was measured in four male subjects and compared with the high-to-low frequency ratio (H/L) of the diaphragmatic electromyogram (EMG) as a predictor of diaphragmatic fatigue. Pdi and inspiratory time-to-total breath duration ratios (TI/TT) were varied, and TT and tidal volume were held constant; inspiratory resistances were used to increase Pdi. Studies were performed at various tension-time indices (TTdi = Pdi/Pdimax X TI/TT). Base-line MRR/Pdi was 0.0100 +/- 0.0004 (SE) ms-1, and baseline tau was 53.2 +/- 3.2 ms. At TTdi greater than 0.20, MRR and H/L decreased and tau increased, with maximum changes at the highest TTdi. At TTdi less than 0.20, there was no change in H/L, MRR, or tau. The time course of changes in H/L correlated with those of MRR and tau under fatiguing conditions. In this experimental setting, change in relaxation rate was as useful a predictor of diaphragmatic fatigue as fall in H/L of the diaphragmatic EMG.  相似文献   

9.
We examined the combined effect of an increase in inspiratory flow rate and frequency on the O2 cost of inspiratory resistive breathing (VO2 resp). In each of three to six pairs of runs we measured VO2 resp in six normal subjects breathing through an inspiratory resistance with a constant tidal volume (VT). One of each pair of runs was performed at an inspiratory muscle contraction frequency of approximately 10/min and the other at approximately 30/min. Inspiratory mouth pressure was 45 +/- 2% (SE) of maximum at the lower contraction frequency and 43 +/- 2% at the higher frequency. Duty cycle (the ratio of contraction time to total cycle time) was constant at 0.51 +/- 0.01. However, during the higher frequency runs, two of every three contractions were against an occluded airway. Because VT and duty cycle were kept constant, mean inspiratory flow rate increased with frequency. Careful selection of appropriate parameters allowed the pairs of runs to be matched both for work rate and pressure-time product. The VO2 resp did not increase, despite approximately threefold increases in both inspiratory flow rate and contraction frequency. On the contrary, there was a trend toward lower values for VO2 resp during the higher frequency runs. Because these were performed at a slightly lower mean lung volume, a second study was designed to measure the VO2 resp of generating the same inspiratory pressure (45% maximum static inspiratory mouth pressure at functional residual capacity) at the same frequency but at two different lung volumes. This was achieved with a negligibly small work rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Respiratory muscle dysfunction limits exercise endurance in severe chronic airflow obstruction (CAO). To investigate whether inspiring O2 alters ventilatory muscle recruitment and improves exercise endurance, we recorded pleural (Ppl) and gastric (Pga) pressures while breathing air or 30% O2 during leg cycling in six patients with severe CAO, mild hypoxemia, and minimal arterial O2 desaturation with exercise. At rest, mean (+/- SD) transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) was lower inspiring 30% O2 compared with air (23 +/- 4 vs. 26 +/- 7 cmH2O, P less than 0.05), but the pattern of Ppl and Pga contraction was identical while breathing either gas mixture. Maximal transdiaphragmatic pressure was similar breathing air or 30% O2 (84 +/- 30 vs. 77 +/- 30 cmH2O). During exercise, Pdi increased similarly while breathing air or 30% O2, but the latter was associated with a significant increase in peak inspiratory Pga and decreases in peak inspiratory Ppl and expiratory Pga. In five out of six patients, exercise endurance increased with O2 (671 +/- 365 vs. 362 +/- 227 s, P less than 0.05). We conclude that exercise with O2 alters ventilatory muscle recruitment and increases exercise endurance. During exercise inspiring O2, the diaphragm performs more ventilatory work which may prevent overloading the accessory muscles of respiration.  相似文献   

11.
We compared the O2 cost of breathing (VO2resp) at high levels of ventilation (HV) with that against high inspiratory pressure loads (HP) using an external elastance when end-expiratory volume, work rate (W), and pressure-time product (P) were matched at two levels of ventilation and elastic loading. Each of five normal subjects performed three pairs of loaded runs (one HV and one HP) bracketed by two resting runs. Mean O2 consumption from the pairs of resting runs was subtracted from that of each of the loaded runs to give VO2resp during loaded breathing. Matching for W and P was within 15% in all 15 pairs of runs. During HV runs, ventilation was 398 +/- 24% of corresponding values during HP runs (P < 0.01). Although there was no difference in W (P > 0.05), the VO2resp during HV runs was 237 +/- 33% of that during HP (P < 0.01) and efficiency of HV was 51 +/- 5% of that during HP (P < 0.01). When W was normalized for the decrease in maximum inspiratory pressure with increased mean lung volume, efficiency during HV and HP runs did not differ (P > 0.05). In the second series of experiments, when both HV and HP runs were matched for W but P was allowed to vary, efficiency increased by 1.42 +/- 0.42% (P < 0.05) for each percent decrease in P during HV runs but was unchanged (P > 0.05) during HP runs despite a 193 +/- 10% increase in P.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Five healthy males exercised progressively with small 2-min increments in work load. We measured inspiratory drive (occlusion pressure, P0.1), pulmonary resistance (RL), dynamic pulmonary compliance (Cdyn), transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi), and diaphragmatic electromyogram (EMGdi). Minute ventilation (VE), mean inspiratory flow rate (VT/TI), and P0.1 all increased exponentially with increased work load, but P0.1 increased at a faster rate than did VT/TI or VE. Thus effective impedance (P0.1/VT/TI) rose throughout exercise. The increasing P0.1 was mostly due to augmented Pdi and coincided with increased EMGdi during this initial portion of inspiration. We found no consistent change in RL or Cdyn throughout exercise. With He breathing (80% He-20% O2), RL was reduced at all work loads; P0.1 fell in comparison with air-breathing values and VE, VT, and VT/TI rose in moderate and heavy work; and P0.1/VT/TI was unchanged with increasing exercise loads. Step reductions in gas density at a constant work load of any intensity showed an immediate reduction in the rate of rise of EMGdi and Pdi followed by increased VT/TI, breathing frequency, and hypocapnia. These changes were maintained during prolonged periods of unloading and were immediately reversible on return to air breathing. These data are consistent with the existence of a reflex effect on the magnitude of inspiratory neural drive during exercise that is sensitive to the load presented by the normal mechanical time constant of the respiratory system. This "load" is a significant determinant of the hyperpneic response and thus of the maintenance of normocapnia during exercise.  相似文献   

13.
Increasing inspiratory flow (V) has been shown to shorten neural inspiratory time (TI(n)) in normal subjects breathing on a mechanical ventilator, but the effect of V on respiratory motor output before inspiratory termination has not previously been studied in humans. While breathing spontaneously on a mechanical ventilator, eight normal subjects were intermittently exposed to 200-ms-duration positive pressure pulses of different amplitudes at the onset of inspiration. Based on the increase in V above control breaths (DeltaV), trials were grouped into small, medium, and large groups (mean DeltaV: 0.51, 1.11, and 1.65 l/s, respectively). We measured TI(n), transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi), and electrical activity (electromyogram) of the diaphragm (EMGdi). Transient increases in V caused shortening of TI(n) from 1.34 to 1.10 (not significant), 1.55 to 1.11 (P < 0.005), and 1.58 to 1.17 s (P < 0. 005) in the small, medium, and large DeltaV groups, respectively. EMGdi measured at end TI(n) of the pulse breaths was 131 (P < 0.05), 142, and 155% (P < 0.05) of the EMGdi of the control breaths at an identical time point in the small, medium, and large trials, respectively. The latency of the excitation was 126 +/- 42 (SD) ms, consistent with a reflex effect. Increasing V had two countervailing effects on Pdi: 1) a depressant mechanical effect due primarily to the force-length (11.2 cmH(2)O/l) relation of the diaphragm, and 2) an increase in diaphragm activation. For the eight subjects, mean peak Pdi did not change significantly, but there was significant intersubject variability, reflecting variability in the strength of the excitation reflex. We conclude that increasing inspiratory V causes a graded facilitation of EMGdi, which serves to counteract the negative effect of the force-length relation on Pdi.  相似文献   

14.
Oxygen cost of inspiratory loading: resistive vs. elastic   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
We measured the O2 cost of breathing (VO2resp) against external inspiratory elastic (E) and resistive loads (R) when end-expiratory lung volume, tidal volume, breathing frequency, work rate, and pressure-time product were matched in each of six pairs of runs in six subjects. During E, peak inspiratory mouth pressure was 65.7 +/- 1.8% (SD) of the maximum at functional residual capacity. However, during resistive runs, peak inspiratory mouth pressure was 41.1 +/- 2.8% of the maximum at functional residual capacity. In 36 paired runs, where both work rate and pressure-time product were within 10%, VO2resp for E was less than for R (81 and 96 ml/min, respectively; P less than 0.01). During loaded and unloaded breathing with the same tidal volume, we measured the changes in anteroposterior diameter of the lower rib cage in five subjects. In four subjects we also recorded the electromyograms of several fixator and stabilizing muscles. During E and R, the change in anteroposterior diameter of the lower rib cage was -116 +/- 5 and -45 +/- 4% (SE), respectively, of the unloaded value (P less than 0.01), indicating greater deformation during E. Although the peak electromyographic activity was 72 +/- 16% greater during E (P less than 0.01), there was no difference between the loads for area under the electromyogram time curve (P greater than 0.05). However, the time to 50% peak activity was less during R (P less than 0.02). We conclude that, even when work rate and pressure-time product are matched, VO2resp during R is greater than that during E. This difference may be due to preferential recruitment of faster and less efficient muscle fibers.  相似文献   

15.
In three foxhounds after left pneumonectomy, the relationships of ventilatory work and respiratory muscle (RM) blood flow to ventilation (VE) during steady-state exercise were examined. VE was measured using a specially constructed respiratory mask and a pneumotach; work of breathing was measured by the esophageal balloon technique. Blood flow to RM was measured by the radionuclide-labeled microsphere technique. Lung compliance after pneumonectomy was 55% of that before pneumonectomy; compliance of the thorax was unchanged. O2 uptake (VO2) of RM comprised only 5% of total body VO2 at exercise. At rest, inspiratory muscles received 62% and expiratory muscles 38% of the total O2 delivered to the RM (QO2RM). During exercise, inspiratory muscles received 59% and expiratory muscles 41% of total QO2RM. Blood flow per gram of muscle to the costal diaphragm was significantly higher than that to the crural diaphragm. The diaphragm, parasternals, and posterior cricoarytenoids were the most important inspiratory muscles, and internal intercostals and external obliques were the most important expiratory muscles for exercise. Up to a VE of 120 l/min through one lung, QO2RM constituted only a small fraction of total body VO2 during exercise and maximal vasodilation in the diaphragm was never approached.  相似文献   

16.
Inspiratory muscle forces and endurance in maximum resistive loading   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The ability of the respiratory muscles to sustain ventilation against increasing inspiratory resistive loads was measured in 10 normal subjects. All subjects reached a maximum rating of perceived respiratory effort and at maximum resistance showed signs of respiratory failure (CO2 retention, O2 desaturation, and rib cage and abdominal paradox). The maximum resistance achieved varied widely (range 73-660 cmH2O X l-1 X s). The increase in O2 uptake (delta Vo2) associated with loading was linearly related to the integrated mouth pressure (IMP): delta Vo2 = 0.028 X IMP + 19 ml/min (r = 0.88, P less than 0.001). Maximum delta Vo2 was 142 ml/min +/- SD 68 ml/min. There were significant (P less than 0.05) relationships between the maximum voluntary inspiratory pressure against an occluded airway (MIP) and both maximum IMP (r = 0.80) and maximum delta Vo2 (r = 0.76). In five subjects, three imposed breathing patterns were used to examine the effect of different patterns of respiratory muscle force deployment. Increasing inspiratory duration (TI) from 1.5 to 3.0 and 6.0 s, at the same frequency of breathing (5.5 breaths/min) reduced peak inspiratory pressure and increased the maximum resistance tolerated (190, 269, and 366 cmH2O X l-1 X s, respectively) and maximum IMP (2043, 2473, and 2913 cmH2O X s X min-1, but the effect on maximum delta Vo2 was less consistent (166, 237, and 180 ml/min). The ventilatory endurance capacity and the maximum O2 uptake of the respiratory muscles are related to the strength of the inspiratory muscles, but are also modified through the pattern of force deployment.  相似文献   

17.
To study the effects of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) on lung volume, and upper airway and respiratory muscle activity, we quantitated the CPAP-induced changes in diaphragmatic and genioglossal electromyograms, esophageal and transdiaphragmatic pressures (Pes and Pdi), and functional residual capacity (FRC) in six normal awake subjects in the supine position. CPAP resulted in increased FRC, increased peak and rate of rise of diaphragmatic activity (EMGdi and EMGdi/TI), decreased peak genioglossal activity (EMGge), decreased inspiratory time and inspiratory duty cycle (P less than 0.001 for all comparisons). Inspiratory changes in Pes and Pdi, as well as Pes/EMGdi and Pdi/EMGdi also decreased (P less than 0.001 for all comparisons), but mean inspiratory airflow for a given Pes increased (P less than 0.001) on CPAP. The increase in mean inspiratory airflow for a given Pes despite the decrease in upper airway muscle activity suggests that CPAP mechanically splints the upper airway. The changes in EMGge and EMGdi after CPAP application most likely reflect the effects of CPAP and the associated changes in respiratory system mechanics on the afferent input from receptors distributed throughout the intact respiratory system.  相似文献   

18.
When a subject breathes against an inspiratory resistance, the inspiratory pressure, the inspiratory flow, and the lung volume at which the breathing task takes place all interact to determine the length of time the task can be sustained (Tlim). We hypothesized that the mechanism actually limiting tasks in which these parameters were varied involved the rate of energy utilization by the inspiratory muscles. To test this hypothesis, we studied four experienced normal subjects during fatiguing breathing tasks performed over a range of pressures and flows and at two different lung volumes. We assessed energy utilization by measuring the increment in the rate of whole body O2 consumption due to the breathing task (VO2 resp). Power and mean esophageal pressure correlated with Tlim but depended also on lung volume and inspiratory flow rate. In contrast, VO2 resp closely correlated with Tlim, and this relationship was not systematically altered by inspiratory flow or lung volume. The shape of the VO2 resp vs. Tlim curve was approximately hyperbolic, with high rates of VO2 resp associated with short endurance times and lower rates of VO2 resp approaching an asymptotic value at high Tlim. These findings are consistent with a mechanism whereby a critical rate of energy utilization determines the endurance of the inspiratory pump, and that rate varies with pressure, flow, and lung volume.  相似文献   

19.
Naloxone alters the early response to an inspiratory flow-resistive load   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
In a previous study in unanesthetized goats, we demonstrated that cerebrospinal fluid levels of beta-endorphin were significantly elevated after 2.5 h of inspiratory flow-resistive loading. Naloxone (NLX) (0.1 mg/kg) administration partially and transiently reversed the tidal volume depression seen during loading. In the current study, we tested the hypothesis that endogenous opioid elaboration results in depression of respiratory output to the diaphragm. In six studies of five unanesthetized goats, tidal volume (VT), transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi), diaphragmatic electromyogram (EMGdi), and arterial blood gases were monitored. A continuous NLX (0.1 mg/kg) or saline (SAL) infusion was begun 5 min before an inspiratory flow-resistive load of 120 cmH2O.l-1.s was imposed. Our data show that the depression of VT induced by the load was prevented by NLX as early as 15 min and persisted for 2 h. At 2 h, Pdi was still 294 +/- 45% of the base-line value compared with 217 +/- 35% during SAL. There was no difference in EMGdi between the groups at any time. However, the augmentation of Pdi was associated with a greater increase in end-expiratory gastric pressure in the NLX group. We conclude that the reduction in VT and Pdi associated with endogenous opioid elaboration is not mediated by a decrease in neural output to the diaphragm, but it appears to be the result of a decrease in respiratory output to the abdominal muscles.  相似文献   

20.
We investigated the respiratory muscle contribution to inspiratory load compensation by measuring diaphragmatic and intercostal electromyograms (EMGdi and EMGic), transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi), and thoracoabdominal motion during CO2 rebreathing with and without 15 cmH2O X l-1 X s inspiratory flow resistance (IRL) in normal sitting volunteers. During IRL compared with control, Pdi measured during airflow and during airway occlusion increased for a given change in CO2 partial pressure and EMGdi, and there was a greater decrease in abdominal (AB) end expiratory anteroposterior dimensions with increased expiratory gastric pressure (Pga), this leading to an inspiratory decline in Pga with outward AB movement, indicating a passive component to the descent of the abdomen-diaphragm. The response of EMGic to IRL was similar to that of EMGdi, though rib cage (RC)-Pga plots did infer intercostal muscle contribution. We conclude that during CO2 rebreathing with IRL there is improved diaphragmatic neuromuscular coupling, the prolongation of inspiration promoting a force-velocity advantage, and increased AB action serving to optimize diaphragm length and configuration, as well as to provide its own passive inspiratory action. Intercostal action provides increased assistance also. Therefore, compensation for inspiratory resistive loads results from the combined and integrated effort of all respiratory muscle groups.  相似文献   

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