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1.
The afferent pathways mediating respiratory load perception are still largely unknown. To assess the role of lung vagal afferents in respiratory sensation, detection of inspiratory resistive loads was compared between 10 double-lung transplant (DLT) recipients with normal lung function and 12 healthy control (Nor) subjects. Despite a similar unloaded and loaded breathing pattern, the DLT group had a significantly higher detection threshold (2.91 +/- 0.5 vs. 1.55 +/- 0.3 cmH(2)O. l(-1). s) and Weber fraction (0.50 +/- 0.1 vs. 0.30 +/- 0.1) compared with the Nor group. These results suggest that inspiratory resistive load detection occurs in the absence of vagal afferent feedback from the lung but that lung vagal afferents contribute to inspiratory resistive load detection response in humans. Lung vagal afferents are not essential to the regulation of resting breathing and load compensation responses.  相似文献   

2.
This study investigated the role of lung vagal afferents in the respiratory-related evoked potential (RREP) response to inspiratory occlusions by using double-lung transplant recipients as a lung denervation model. Evoked potential recordings in response to inspiratory occlusions were obtained from 10 double-lung transplant (DLT) recipients with normal lung function and 12 healthy control (Nor) subjects under the attend, ignore, and unoccluded conditions. Results demonstrated that early-latency RREP components (P(1), P(1a), N(f), and N(1)) were not significantly different between the DLT and the Nor groups. The late-latency RREP component (P(3)) was identifiable in all DLT subjects during the attend trial. However, P(3) latency was significantly longer in the DLT group compared with the Nor group. The zero-to-peak amplitude of P(3) was also significantly smaller in the DLT group than that in the Nor group during the attend trial. These results suggest that lung vagal afferents were not essential to elicit RREP responses, but may contribute to the cognitive processing of respiratory stimuli.  相似文献   

3.
Six healthy male adults were studied at five levels of suprathreshold added resistance (delta R) applied thrice to either inspiration (I) or expiration (E) in a random sequence. Subjects squeezed on isometric handgrip dynamometer to express the perceived magnitude of the load. Peak mouth pressure (Pm), flow, grip (G), and delta R were analyzed to derive the exponent for Steven's power law. We observed that the slope for log G vs. log delta R was significantly greater for I loads than for E loads (P less than 0.05), but the intercepts for E loads were significantly elevated. However, the slopes and intercepts for log G vs. log Pm during the same I and E loads were not significantly different. When subjects were instructed to target I or E flow to a preset level, we observed no difference between the slopes and intercepts for log G vs. log delta R during I and E loading. These results suggest that 1) the sensory information utilized in judging the magnitude of added resistance is more likely related to the force generated by the respiratory muscles (Pm) rather than delta R per se; and 2) similar muscle receptors and neural processing systems are utilized in the estimation of added loads involving either inspiratory or expiratory muscle groups.  相似文献   

4.
The objective of this study was to determine the stability of the function describing subjects' magnitude estimates of added inspiratory resistive loads following short-term exposure (STE) to a high but nonfatiguing, inspiratory load. Four inspiratory resistive loads (8.9-35.7 cmH2O X l-1 X s) were presented twice each in random order. Subjects were asked to estimate load magnitude by force of handgrip. Perceptual performance was quantified using Stevens power law, psi = k phi n, where psi is the subject's estimate, k is a constant, and phi is the peak mouth pressure developed against the load. The exponent n represents the slope of the line in the plot of log psi vs. log phi. After a 2-min period in which subjects were required to generate 80% of their maximum inspiratory pressure against a high resistance, the load estimation protocol was repeated. Estimates were significantly reduced compared to control; however, there was no significant difference in the exponent for magnitude functions between conditions. Similar results were obtained in a second parallel experiment involving magnitude estimation of weights lifted by the elbow flexors. The results suggest plasticity in the mechanism(s) subserving sensation of added loads to breathing and that such plasticity is a general feature of sensation arising from nonrespiratory muscles as well.  相似文献   

5.
Effects of expiratory resistive loading on the sensation of dyspnea   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To determine whether an increase in expiratory motor output accentuates the sensation of dyspnea (difficulty in breathing), the following experiments were undertaken. Ten normal subjects, in a series of 2-min trials, breathed freely (level I) or maintained a target tidal volume equal to (level II) or twice the control (level III) at a breathing frequency of 15/min (similar to the control frequency) with an inspiratory load, an expiratory load, and without loads under hyperoxic normocapnia. In tests at levels II and III, end-expiratory lung volume was maintained at functional residual capacity. A linear resistance of 25 cmH2O.1(-1).s was used for both inspiratory and expiratory loading; peak mouth pressure (Pm) was measured, and the intensity of dyspnea (psi) was assessed with a visual analog scale. The sensation of dyspnea increased significantly with the magnitude of expiratory Pm during expiratory loading (level II: Pm = 9.4 +/- 1.5 (SE) cmH2O, psi = 1.26 +/- 0.35; level III: Pm = 20.3 +/- 2.8 cmH2O, psi = 2.22 +/- 0.48) and with inspiratory Pm during inspiratory loading (level II: Pm = 9.7 +/- 1.2 cmH2O, psi = 1.35 +/- 0.38; level III: Pm = 23.9 +/- 3.0 cmH2O, psi = 2.69 +/- 0.60). However, at each level of breathing, neither the intensity of dyspnea nor the magnitude of peak Pm during loading was different between inspiratory and expiratory loading. The augmentation of dyspnea during expiratory loading was not explained simply by increases in inspiratory activity. The results indicate that heightened expiratory as well as inspiratory motor output causes comparable increases in the sensation of difficulty in breathing.  相似文献   

6.
The physiological mechanisms mediating the detection of mechanical loads are unknown. This is, in part, due to the lack of an animal model of load detection that could be used to investigate specific sensory systems. We used American Foxhounds with tracheal stomata to behaviorally condition the detection of inspiratory occlusion and graded resistive loads. The resistive loads were presented with a loading manifold connected to the inspiratory port of a non-rebreathing valve. The dogs signaled detection of the load by lifting their front paw off a lever. Inspiratory occlusion was used as the initial training stimulus, and the dogs could reliably respond within the first or second inspiratory effort to 100% of the occlusion presentations after 13 trials. Graded resistances that spanned the 50% detection threshold were then presented. The detection threshold resistances (delta R50) were 0.96 and 1.70 cmH2O.l-1.s. Ratios of delta R50 to background resistance were 0.15 and 0.30. The near-threshold resistive loads did not significantly change expired PCO2 or breathing patterns. These results demonstrate that dogs can be conditioned to reliably and specifically signal the detection of graded inspiratory mechanical loads. Inspiration through the tracheal stoma excludes afferents in the upper extrathoracic trachea, larynx, pharynx, nasal passages, and mouth from mediating load detection in these dogs. It is unknown which remaining afferents (vagal or respiratory muscle) are responsible for load detection.  相似文献   

7.
Using decerebrate frogs (Rana catesbeiana), we investigated the role of vagal and laryngeal sensory feedback in controlling motor activation of the larynx. Vagal and laryngeal nerve afferents were activated by electrical stimulation of the intact vagal and laryngeal nerves. Pulmonary afferents were activated by lung inflation. Reflex responses were recorded by measuring efferent activity in the laryngeal branch of the vagus (Xℓ) and changes in glottal aperture. Two glottic closure reflexes were identified, one evoked by lung inflation or electrical stimulation of the main branch of the vagus (Xm), and the other by electrical stimulation of Xℓ. Lung inflation evoked a decrementing burst of Xℓ efferent activity and electrical stimulation of Xm resulted in a brief burst of Xℓ action potentials. Electrical stimulation of Xℓ evoked a triphasic mechanical response, an abrupt glottal constriction followed by glottal dilatation followed by a long-lasting glottal constriction. The first phase was inferred to be a direct (nonreflex) response to the stimulus, whereas the second and third represent reflex responses to the activation of laryngeal afferents. Intracellular recordings of membrane potential of vagal motoneurons of lung and nonlung types revealed EPSPs in both types of neurons evoked by stimulation of Xm or Xℓ, indicating activation of glottal dilator and constrictor motoneurons. In summary, we have identified two novel reflexes producing glottic closure, one stimulated by activation of pulmonary receptors and the other by laryngeal receptors. The former may be part of an inspiratory terminating reflex and the latter may represent an airway protective reflex. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Neurobiol 33: 213–222, 1997  相似文献   

8.
The sensation of respiratory muscle force was compared in seven normal subjects before and after inspiratory muscle strength training. Subjects performed 20 sustained maximal inspiratory maneuvers daily for 6-18 wk. Maximal inspiratory pressures (MIP) increased from 124 +/- 10 to 187 +/- 9 (SE) cmH2O (P less than 0.005). Exponents of the power function relationships between mouth pressure (Pm) and the intensity of the sensation of force, corrected for inspiratory duration, during magnitude scaling of resistive and elastic ventilatory loads were the same before and after training (P greater than 0.05). However, absolute sensation intensity (S) during resistive and elastic loading was reduced significantly after strength training but returned toward baseline levels greater than or equal to 8 wk after the cessation of training when the MIP had fallen to 150 +/- 5 cmH2O. The absolute S at a given Pm during ventilatory loading changed inversely with changes in MIP (P less than 0.001). Furthermore the relationship between absolute S and Pm expressed as a proportion of the MIP (Pm/MIP) was constant over testing periods. These results suggest that the sensation of respiratory muscle force reflects the proportion of the maximum force utilized in breathing and may be based on the level of respiratory motor command signals.  相似文献   

9.
To investigate the influence of inspiratory lung inflation on the respiratory activities of laryngeal motor nerves, vagally intact decerebrate paralyzed cats were ventilated by a servorespirator in accordance with their own phrenic nerve activity. Records were made of the activities of the phrenic nerve, the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN), the recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN), and the intralaryngeal branches of the RLN serving the thyroarytenoid (TA) and posterior cricoarytenoid (PCA) muscles. Neural activities were assessed in the steady state at different end-tidal O2 and CO2 concentrations. Transient responses to withholding inspiratory lung inflation and to preventing expiratory lung emptying were also studied. Hypercapnia and hypoxia increased the inspiratory activities of the phrenic nerve, SLN, RLN, and its PCA branch. TA inspiratory activity was not changed. Expiratory activities of RLN, PCA, and TA were all increased in hypoxia. When lung inflation was withheld, neural inspiratory duration and the inspiratory activities of all nerves increased. The subsequent period of neural expiration was marked by an exaggerated burst of activity by the TA branch of the RLN. TA expiratory activity was also sharply increased after inspiratory efforts that were reflexly delayed by the prevention of lung emptying. TA activity in expiration was enhanced after vagotomy and was usually more prominent than when lung inflation was withheld before vagal section. The results demonstrate the importance and complexity of the influence of vagal afferents on laryngeal motor activity.  相似文献   

10.
It is known that lung vagal C-fiber afferents play an important role in eliciting the tachypneic response to pulmonary air embolism (PAE), and can be subgrouped as those with low resistance (LRC) and those with high resistance (HRC) to perivagal capsaicin. In this study, we investigated the relative contributions of vagal LRC and HRC C-fiber afferents to the PAE-induced tachypneic response. Phrenic activity was recorded from 10 anesthetized, paralyzed, and artificially ventilated dogs. PAE was induced by infusion of air into the vein (2 ml/min, 1 ml/kg). During control conditions, induction of PAE produced a shortening in expiratory duration with no significant change in inspiratory duration, resulting in tachypnea. The PAE-induced tachypneic response was totally abolished by perivagal capsaicin treatment with a method (capsaicin concentration, 6 mg/ml; treatment duration, 25-30 min) that blocks the conduction of LRC C-fiber afferents, but not that of HRC C-fiber afferents. This tachypneic response was not affected by cooling of both vagi to a temperature (4.5 degrees C) that blocks the conduction of HRC C-fiber afferents, but not that of LRC C-fiber afferents. A bilateral cervical vagotomy virtually eliminated this tachypneic response. These results suggest that LRC C-fiber afferents are responsible for eliciting the reflex tachypneic response to PAE, whereas HRC C-fiber afferents play no vital role.  相似文献   

11.
Using open-magnitude scaling, six normal subjects estimated the perceived magnitude of a range of added elastic loads (20-76 cmH2O/l), applied for a sequence of five breaths, at frequencies varying from 5 to 26.4 breaths/min. Two experiments were performed. In the first, frequency was increased by a reduction in expiratory duration (TE), and the duty cycle (ratio of inspiratory duration to total breath duration, TI/TT) ranged between 0.10 and 0.52. The perceived magnitude psi increased significantly with the peak airway pressure (Pm) (P less than 0.0001) but did not reach conventional significance with frequency (fb) (P = 0.15): psi = K0Pm1.23fb0.07 (r = 0.911). However, the sensory magnitude increased significantly as the duty cycle increased (P less than 0.01), but when it was included, the magnitude decreased minimally with frequency (P less than 0.01): psi = K0Pm1.3fb-0.97 TI/TT1.14 (r = 0.92). In the second experiment the duty cycle (TI/TT) was kept constant [(0.43 +/- 0.008 (SE)] and frequency (5-26.4 breaths/min) increased at the expense of shortening both TI and TE. The perceived magnitude of the added elastances decreased with the increase in frequency. However, when the perceived magnitude was corrected for the duration of inspiration, which is known to increase the sensory magnitude, psi = K0Pm1.3TI0.56, the sensory magnitude increased significantly with frequency (P less than 0.001): psi/TI0.56 = K0Pm1.21fb0.28 (r = 0.773). The decrease in inspiratory duration had a greater quantitative effect decreasing sensory magnitude than frequency had on increasing the magnitude. The effect of increasing frequency is complex and depends on the simultaneous intensity, duration of inspiratory pressure, and the duty cycle.  相似文献   

12.
We examined the effects of external mechanical loading on glottic dimensions in 13 normal subjects. When flow-resistive loads of 7, 27, and 48 cmH2O X l-1 X s, measured at 0.2 l/s, were applied during expiration, glottic width at the mid-tidal volume point in expiration (dge) was 2.3 +/- 12, 37.9 +/- 7.5, and 38.3 +/- 8.9% (means +/- SE) less than the control dge, respectively. Simultaneously, mouth pressure (Pm) increased by 2.5 +/- 4, 3.0 +/- 0.4, and 4.6 +/- 0.6 cmH2O, respectively. When subjects were switched from a resistance to a positive end-expiratory pressure at comparable values of Pm, both dge and expiratory flow returned to control values, whereas the level of hyperinflation remained constant. Glottic width during inspiration (unloaded) did not change on any of the resistive loads. There was a slight inverse relationship between the ratio of expiratory to inspiratory glottic width and the ratio of expiratory to inspiratory duration. Our results show noncompensatory glottic narrowing when subjects breathe against an expiratory resistance and suggest that the glottic dimensions are influenced by the time course of lung emptying during expiration. We speculate that the glottic constriction is related to the increased activity of expiratory medullary neurons during loaded expiration and, by increasing the internal impedance of the respiratory system, may have a stabilizing function.  相似文献   

13.
We have recorded the action potentials of muscle fibres of External Oblique in anaesthetized rabbits in supine and horizontal position. During head-up tilting the inspiratory activity is inhibited and the abdominal activity is excited. Both these two responses are reflexly mediated through vagal afferent fibres. The positive pressure was chosen as to determine a shift in end-expiratory volume similar to that induced by the head-up tilting. Also at positive pressure breathing (PPB) the abdominal activity increases but less than during head-up tilting. This result seems to indicate the importante of the proprioceptive afferents of the external oblique during the vertical posture. The blockade of vagal nervous conduction markedly reduces the abdominal activity both during tilting and P.P.B. and similar results are obtained either by "total" or "partial" vagal blockade. Therefore it seems possible to conclude that both these two reflexes (introduced by head-up tilting and PPB) be due to the activation of the same receptors (pulmonary stretch receptors).  相似文献   

14.
In rabbits anaesthetized with ethyl-carbamate, stimulation of chemoreceptors afferents was allowed by transient hypercapnia, before and after vagal blockade by DC current. In these relatively fast breathing animals, the transient hypercapnia produced light changes of inspiratory tidal volume (VI), inspiratory (TI) and expiratory durations (TE). Despite the identity of transient hypercapnia, it ensued that: (1) the higher the spontaneous VI and the lower the respiratory frequency (fR), the greater their respective changes (deltaVI and deltafR) during the ventilatory response; (2) after vagal blockade, greater changes in VI, TI, TE and mean inspiratory flow rate (VI/TI) occurred than in control state, while the relation between deltafR and fR was more significant than in control state. Respective roles played by vagal and chemoreceptors afferents in the ventilatory response to transient hypercapnia are discussed.  相似文献   

15.
Experiments were performed to test the hypothesis that human eosinophil granule-derived cationic proteins stimulate vagal C-fiber afferents in the lungs and elicit pulmonary chemoreflex responses in anesthetized Sprague-Dawley rats. Intratracheal instillation of eosinophil cationic protein (ECP; 1-2 mg/ml, 0.1 ml) consistently induced an irregular breathing pattern, characterized by tachypnea (change in breathing frequency of 44.7%) and small unstable tidal volume (VT). The tachypnea, accompanied by decreased heart rate and arterial blood pressure, started within 30 s after the delivery of ECP and lasted for >30 min. These ECP-induced cardiorespiratory responses were completely prevented by perineural capsaicin treatment of both cervical vagi, which selectively blocked C-fiber conduction, suggesting the involvement of these afferents. Indeed, direct recording of single-unit activities of pulmonary C-fibers further demonstrated that the same dose of ECP evoked a pronounced and sustained (>30-min) stimulatory effect on pulmonary C-fibers. Furthermore, the sensitivity of these afferents to lung inflation was also markedly elevated after the ECP instillation, whereas the vehicle of ECP administered in the same manner had no effect. Other types of eosinophil granule cationic proteins, such as major basic protein and eosinophil peroxidase, induced very similar respiratory and cardiovascular reflex responses. In conclusion, these results show that eosinophil granule-derived cationic proteins induce a distinct stimulatory effect on vagal pulmonary C-fiber endings, which may play an important role in the airway hyperresponsiveness associated with eosinophil infiltration in the airways.  相似文献   

16.
It has long been recognized that humans can perceive respiratory loads. There have been several studies on the detection and psychophysical quantification of mechanical load perception. This investigation was designed to record cortical sensory neurogenic activity related to inspiratory mechanical loading in humans. Inspiration was periodically occluded in human subjects while the electroencephalographic (EEG) activity in the somatosensory region of the cerebral cortex was recorded. The onset of inspiratory mouth pressure (Pm) was used to initiate signal averaging of the EEG signals. Cortical evoked potentials elicited by inspiratory occlusions were observed when C3 and C alpha were referenced to CZ. This evoked potential was not observed with the control (unoccluded) breaths. There was considerable subject variability in the peak latencies that was related to the differences in the inspiratory drive, as measured by occlusion pressure (P0.1). The results of this study demonstrate that neurogenic activity can be recorded in the somatosensory region of the cortex that is related to inspiratory occlusions. The peak latencies are longer than analogous somatosensory evoked potentials elicited by stimulation of the hand and foot. It is hypothesized that a portion of this latency difference is related to the time required for the subject to generate sufficient inspiratory force to activate the afferents mediating the cortical response.  相似文献   

17.
Xu, Fadi, and Donald T. Frazier. Involvement of thefastigial nuclei in vagally mediated respiratory responses.J. Appl. Physiol. 82(6):1853-1861, 1997.Previous studies have demonstrated that thecerebellum, especially the fastigial nucleus (FN), is capable ofmodulating respiratory responses to chemical and mechanical stimuli.Because there is evidence to show projections from vagal afferents tothe FN, the goal of this study was to determine the role of the FN inthe respiratory reflexes elicited by activation of vagal afferents.Experiments were performed in anesthetized (chloralose), paralyzed, andartificially ventilated cats with an occipital exposure of thecerebellum. Administration of capsaicin (Cap; 5-10 µg/kg) viathe right external jugular vein at the end of inspiration andapplication of lung inflation (LI; 10 cmH2O) during inspiration werecarried out to stimulate nonmyelinated and myelinated vagal afferents,respectively. The phrenic neurogram was recorded as anindex of the respiratory motor output. Control cardiorespiratoryvariables [expiratory duration(TE), arterial bloodpressure] and their immediate responses to stimuli were comparedbefore and after bilateral lesions of the FN. The results showed thefollowing. 1) Capinjection and LI resulted in a dramatic increase inTE (apnea).2) FN lesions did not significantlyalter the control TE; however,the apneic duration induced by Cap injection was prolonged.3) Neither FN lesions norcerebellectomy affected the apneic duration that resulted fromapplication of LI. 4) Cold blockadeof the vagi (6-8°C) eliminated the respiratory responses elicited by LI but not Cap injection; vagotomy abolished the responses to both stimuli. 5) FN lesions didnot change the control ABP or its responses to either LI or Capinjection. It is concluded that the FN is involved in vagally mediatedrespiratory reflexes elicited by activation of nonmyelinated (C-fiber)vagal afferents.

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18.
Response of normal subjects to inspiratory resistive unloading   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The purpose of this study was to examine the role of the normal inspiratory resistive load in the regulation of respiratory motor output in resting conscious humans. We used a recently described device (J. Appl. Physiol. 62: 2491-2499, 1987) to make mouth pressure during inspiration positive and proportional to inspiratory flow, thus causing inspiratory resistive unloading (IRUL); the magnitude of IRUL (delta R = -3.0 cmH2O.1(-1).s) was set so as to unload most (approximately 86% of the normal inspiratory resistance. Six conscious normal humans were studied. Driving pressure (DP) was calculated according to the method of Younes et al. (J. Appl. Physiol. 51: 963-1001, 1981), which provides the equivalent of occlusion pressure at functional residual capacity throughout the breath. IRUL resulted in small but significant changes in minute ventilation (0.6 1/min) and in end-tidal CO2 concentration (-0.11%) with no significant change in tidal volume or respiratory frequency. There was a significant shortening of the duration (neural inspiratory time) of the rising phase of the DP waveform and the shape of the rising phase became more convex to the time axis. There was no change in the average rate of rise of DP or in the duration or shape of the declining phase. We conclude that 1) the normal inspiratory resistance is an important determinant of the duration and shape of the rising phase of DP and 2) the neural responses elicited by the normal inspiratory resistance are similar to those observed with added inspiratory resistive loads.  相似文献   

19.
In 11 anesthetized dogs placed under extracorporeal circulation, the vagal feedback was tested by electrical stimulation of the vagus nerves with cold block of their caudal part and by passive lung hyperinflation. The apneic response to such vagal stimulation progressively disappeared during expiratory threshold load breathing but then returned to control values some minutes after the load was removed. This suppression of the inhibitory response to stimulation of the vagus nerves was usually observed when vagal afferents were intact or blocked by cold. However, it was not observed whether no evoked activity continued in expiratory muscles after the cold block, or after suppression of all proprioceptive muscular afferents after transection of the spinal cord at C6 level. These results strongly suggest that enhancement of proprioceptive inputs to the respiratory centers counteracts the vagally mediated inspiratory "off-switch" mechanisms.  相似文献   

20.
In anesthetized, artificially ventilated cats with open chest, bilateral stimulation of all afferent vagal fibres (pulse duration: 800 microseconds, 30 Hz, train duration 30 to 40 s) produced marked changes in the spontaneous EEG activities in the primary somatosensory cortex (Sl area). They were characterized by depressed background rhythms, with a tendency to desynchronization, decreased amplitude and number of spindles, with altered pattern, and/or evoked sustained fast rhythmic activities. These effects occurred within 1 to 5 sec during vagal stimulation. On the contrary, the EEG response was weaker or absent when only myelinated vagal afferents were stimulated (100 microseconds). I.v. injection of phenyldiguanide (PDG), used for stimulation of unmyelinated vagal sensory fibres and mainly of pulmonary afferents, induced EEG changes within the first 30 s, similar to those observed during electrical vagal stimulation. These EEG responses were unrelated to the induced hypotension. Cervical bivagotomy produced persistent changes in EEG activity, with enhancement of the magnitude, duration and number of spindles, which resembled the delayed effects induced by PDG. The present results obtained with three test agents (electrical or chemical vagal stimulation and bivagotomy) demonstrated that, in cats, vagal afferent information interacted with the spontaneous EEG rhythms in the Sl area.  相似文献   

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