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1.
cAMP plays an important role in peripheral chemoreflex function in animals. We tested the hypothesis that the phosphodiesterase inhibitor and inotropic medication enoximone increases peripheral chemoreflex function in humans. In a single-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled crossover study of 15 men, we measured ventilatory, muscle sympathetic nerve activity, and hemodynamic responses to 5 min of isocapnic hypoxia, 5 min of hyperoxic hypercapnia, and 3 min of isometric handgrip exercise, separated by 1 wk, with enoximone and placebo administration. Enoximone increased cardiac output by 120 +/- 3.7% from baseline (P < 0.001); it also increased the ventilatory response to acute hypoxia [13.6 +/- 1 vs. 11.2 +/- 0.7 l/min at 5 min of hypoxia, P = 0.03 vs. placebo (by ANOVA)]. Despite a larger minute ventilation and a smaller decrease in O(2) desaturation (83 +/- 1 vs. 79 +/- 2%, P = 0.003), the muscle sympathetic nerve response to hypoxia was similar between enoximone and placebo (123 +/- 6 and 117 +/- 6%, respectively, P = 0.28). In multivariate regression analyses, enoximone enhanced the ventilatory (P < 0.001) and sympathetic responses to isocapnic hypoxia. Hyperoxic hypercapnia and isometric handgrip responses were not different between enoximone and placebo (P = 0.13). Enoximone increases modestly the chemoreflex responses to isocapnic hypoxia. Moreover, this effect is specific for the peripheral chemoreflex, inasmuch as central chemoreflex and isometric handgrip responses were not altered by enoximone.  相似文献   

2.
This study used a modified CO(2) rebreathing procedure to examine the effect of gender on the chemoreflex control of breathing during wakefulness in healthy men (n = 14) and women (n = 14). Women were tested in the follicular phase of the menstrual cycle. During rebreathing trials, subjects hyperventilated to reduce the partial pressure of end-tidal CO(2) (Pet(CO(2))) below 25 Torr and were then switched to a rebreathing bag containing a normocapnic hypoxic or hyperoxic gas mixture. During the trial, Pet(CO(2)) increased, while O(2) was maintained at a constant level. The point at which ventilation began to rise as Pet(CO(2)) increased was identified as the ventilatory recruitment threshold (VRT). Ventilation below the VRT was measured, and the slope of the ventilatory response above the VRT was determined. Gender had no effect on the hyperoxic or hypoxic VRT for CO(2). Central chemoreflex sensitivity was significantly greater in men than women but not after correction for forced vital capacity. Measures of peripheral chemoreflex sensitivity were similar between genders. However, the slope of the tidal volume (Vt) response to hyperoxic and hypoxic CO(2) rebreathing (corrected and uncorrected) was greater in men than women, respectively. We conclude that central chemoreflex sensitivity is greater in men compared with women as reflected by differences in ventilatory (uncorrected) and Vt (corrected and uncorrected) responses to CO(2). However, gender has no significant effect on the central chemoreflex VRT for CO(2). The peripheral chemoreflex control of breathing during wakefulness is similar between men and women.  相似文献   

3.
During sustained hypoxia the decline in ventilation that occurs in normal adult humans may be related to central accumulation of a neurochemical with net inhibitory effect. Recent investigations have shown that the putative neurotransmitter adenosine can effect a prolonged respiratory inhibition. Therefore we evaluated the possible role of adenosine in the hypoxia ventilatory decline by employing aminophylline as an adenosine blocker. We evaluated the ventilatory response to 25 min of sustained hypoxia (80% arterial O2 saturation), in eight young adults after pretreatment with either intravenous saline or aminophylline. With a mean serum aminophylline level of 15.7 mg/l, over 25 min of sustained hypoxia, peak hypoxic ventilation decreased by only 12.8% compared with 24.8% with saline, a significant difference. However, the ventilatory decline during sustained hypoxia was not abolished by the aminophylline pretreatment. Unlike the usual tidal volume-dependent attenuation of hypoxic ventilation exhibited after saline, after aminophylline the ventilatory decline was achieved predominantly through alterations in respiratory timing. Thus aminophylline pretreatment did alleviate the hypoxic ventilatory decline, although the associated alterations in breathing pattern were uncharacteristic. We conclude that adenosine may play a contributing role in the hypoxic ventilatory decline.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Presympathetic neurons in the different anteroposterior aspects of rostral ventrolateral medulla (RVLM) are colocalized with expiratory [B?tzinger complex (B?tC)] and inspiratory [pre-B?tzinger complex (pre-B?tC)] neurons of ventral respiratory column (VRC), suggesting that this region integrates the cardiovascular and respiratory chemoreflex responses. In the present study, we evaluated in different anteroposterior aspects of RVLM of awake rats the role of ionotropic glutamate and purinergic receptors on cardiorespiratory responses to chemoreflex activation. The bilateral ionotropic glutamate receptors antagonism with kynurenic acid (KYN) (8 nmol/50 nl) in the rostral aspect of RVLM (RVLM/B?tC) enhanced the tachypneic (120 ± 9 vs. 180 ± 9 cpm; P < 0.01) and attenuated the pressor response (55 ± 2 vs. 15 ± 1 mmHg; P < 0.001) to chemoreflex activation (n = 7). On the other hand, bilateral microinjection of KYN into the caudal aspect of RVLM (RVLM/pre-B?tC) caused a respiratory arrest in four awake rats used in the present study. Bilateral P2X receptors antagonism with PPADS (0.25 nmol/50 nl) in the RVLM/B?tC reduced chemoreflex tachypneic response (127 ± 6 vs. 70 ± 5 cpm; P < 0.001; n = 6), but did not change the chemoreflex pressor response. In addition, PPADS into the RVLM/B?tC attenuated the enhancement of the tachypneic response to chemoreflex activation elicited by previous microinjections of KYN into the same subregion (188 ± 2 vs. 157 ± 3 cpm; P < 0.05; n = 5). Our findings indicate that: 1) L-glutamate, but not ATP, in the RVLM/B?tC is required for pressor response to peripheral chemoreflex and 2) both transmitters in the RVLM/B?tC are required for the processing of the ventilatory response to peripheral chemoreflex activation in awake rats.  相似文献   

6.
Resting respiratory parameters and respiratory responses to acute changes in end-tidal O2 and CO2 pressure (PETO2 and PETCO2) were investigated in Peru in 23 newborn and 4 older infants at 3.850 m and in 13 newborns at 800 m. The study was done with the subjects asleep in a thermoneutral environment. The transient increase in ventilation in both high- and low-altitude newborns was followed by a decrease in response to acute hypoxia. During hyperoxia the two groups showed a slight but not clearly significant decrease in ventilation, whereas older high-altitude infants showed a sustained decrease. All subjects showed a prompt and clear response to CO2 inhalation during hyperoxia. We conclude that ventilatory peripheral chemoreflex is not fully developed in newborns regardless of altitude. The weak link in the reflex arc may reside in the afferent component because CO2 response was not impaired. Since hypoxic response became persistent in older infants its blunting in adult high-altitude natives is not a legacy of newborns.  相似文献   

7.
The purpose of this study was to test whether chronically enhanced O2 delivery to tissues, without arterial hyperoxia, can change acute ventilatory responses to hypercapnia and hypoxia. The effects of decreased hemoglobin (Hb)-O2 affinity on ventilatory responses during hypercapnia (0, 5, 7, and 9% CO2 in O2) and hypoxia (10 and 15% O2 in N2) were assessed in mutant mice expressing Hb Presbyterian (mutation in the beta-globin gene, beta108 Asn --> Lys). O2 consumption during normoxia, measured via open-circuit methods, was significantly higher in the mutant mice than in wild-type mice. Respiratory measurements were conducted with a whole body, unrestrained, single-chamber plethysmograph under conscious conditions. During hypercapnia, there was no difference between the slopes of the hypercapnic ventilatory responses, whereas minute ventilation at the same levels of arterial PCO2 was lower in the Presbyterian mice than in the wild-type mice. During both hypoxic exposures, ventilatory responses were blunted in the mutant mice compared with responses in the wild-type mice. The effects of brief hyperoxia exposure (100% O2) after 10% hypoxia on ventilation were examined in anesthetized, spontaneously breathing mice with a double-chamber plethysmograph. No significant difference was found in ventilatory responses to brief hypoxia between both groups of mice, indicating possible involvement of central mechanisms in blunted ventilatory responses to hypoxia in Presbyterian mice. We conclude that chronically enhanced O2 delivery to peripheral tissues can reduce ventilation during acute hypercapnic and hypoxic exposures.  相似文献   

8.
The present study aimed to determine whether peripheral and/or central chemoreflex function is altered in chronic heart failure (CHF) and whether altered chemoreflex function contributes to sympathetic activation in CHF. A rabbit model of pacing-induced CHF was employed. The development of CHF (3-4 wk of pacing) was characterized by an enlarged heart, an attenuated contractility, and an elevated central venous pressure. Renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) and minute volume (MV) of ventilation in response to stimulation of peripheral chemoreceptors by isocapnic/hypoxic gases were measured in the conscious state. It was found that the baseline RSNA at normoxia was higher in CHF rabbits than in sham rabbits (35. 00 +/- 4.03 vs. 20.75 +/- 2.87% of maximum, P < 0.05). Moreover, the magnitudes of changes in RSNA and MV in response to stimulation of the peripheral chemoreceptors and the slopes of RSNA-arterial PO2 and MV-arterial PO2 curves were greater in CHF than in sham rabbits. Inhibition of the peripheral chemoreceptors by inhalation of 100% O2 decreased RSNA in CHF but not in sham rabbits. The central chemoreflex function, as evaluated by the responses of RSNA and MV to hyperoxic/hypercapnic gases, was not different between sham and CHF rabbits. These data suggest that an enhancement of the peripheral chemoreflex occurs in the rabbit model of pacing-induced CHF and that the enhanced peripheral chemoreflex function contributes to the sympathetic activation in the CHF state.  相似文献   

9.
Exposure to hypoxia, whether for short or prolonged periods or for repeated episodes, produces alterations in the ventilatory responses. This review presents evidence that these adaptations are likely to be mediated by adaptations in the respiratory chemoreflexes, particularly the peripheral chemoreflex, and proposes models of respiratory control explaining the observed changes in ventilation. After a brief introduction to the respiratory control system, a graphical model is developed that illustrates the operation of the system in the steady state, which will be used later. Next, the adaptations in ventilatory responses to hypoxia that have been observed are described, and methods of measuring the alterations in the chemoreflexes that might account for them are discussed. Finally, experimental data supporting the view that changes in the activity of the peripheral chemoreflex can account for the ventilatory adaptations to hypoxia are presented and incorporated into models of chemoreflex behaviour during exposures to hypoxia of various durations.  相似文献   

10.
It has often been assumed that under normoxia, closed-loop ventilatory responses to transient CO2 stimulation (i.e., lasting for 1-3 breaths) are less likely to be mediated by the slow-responding central (medullary) chemoreflex. This assumption, however, has not been quantitatively examined in humans. We hypothesized that in the closed-loop respiratory chemical feedback system [in which the centrally mediated ventilatory response to transient changes in the arterial PCO2 levels (PaCO2) will in turn affect the pulmonary CO2 and hence PaCO2], the contribution of the central chemoreflex pathways to brief disturbances in blood gases may be more important than considered previously. Using the technique of pseudorandom binary CO2 stimulation, we quantified the ventilatory response of normal humans to brief disturbances in arterial CO2 during hyperoxia. Tidal volume (VI), inspiratory ventilation (VI), inspiratory time (TI), expiratory time (TE), and end-tidal CO2 fraction (FETCO2) were measured in subjects who inhaled a mixture that was pseudorandomly switched between 95% O2-5% CO2 and 100% O2 (63 breath sequences). From these data, we calculated the responses of VI, VI, TI, TE, and FETCO2 to a single-breath inhalation of 1% CO2 in O2. Our results showed that in response to a brief increase of 0.75 Torr in alveolar CO2, VI showed a transient increase (average peak response of 0.12 1/min) that persisted for greater than or equal to 80 s in every subject. The response of VI was similar to that of VI, whereas TI and TE showed no consistent changes. Using these results we calculated that central chemoreflex pathways may contribute significantly to typical transient CO2 stimulation tests in hyperoxic and normoxic humans.  相似文献   

11.
Comparison of chemoreflex gains obtained with two different methods in cats   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
This study investigates the correspondence between results of the ventilatory response to CO2 obtained using the technique of dynamic end-tidal CO2 forcing (DEF) and results obtained using the technique of artificial brain stem perfusion (ABP). The DEF technique separates the dynamic ventilatory response into a slow and fast component with gains g1 and g2 as well as the extrapolated CO2 tension at zero ventilation (Bk). The ABP technique results in steady-state central (Sc) and peripheral (Sp) chemoreflex gains and extrapolated CO2 tension at zero ventilation (B). Experiments were performed on 14 alpha-chloralose-urethan anesthetized cats. A wide range of relative peripheral chemosensitivities was obtained by subjecting eight cats to normoxic and three cats to hypoxic CO2 challenges and three cats to both conditions. Statistical analysis of the experimental data showed that the vectors (g1, g2, Bk) and (Sc, Sp, B) for each cat did not differ significantly (P = 0.56). This was also the case for the vectors [g2/(g1 + g2), Bk] and [Sp/(Sc + Sp), B] (P = 0.21). We conclude that in the DEF experiments the slow ventilatory response to isoxic changes in end-tidal CO2 can be equated with the central chemoreflex loop and the faster ventilatory response to the peripheral chemoreflex loop. The agreement between the two techniques is good.  相似文献   

12.
13.
The role of chemoreflexes originating from carotid body and central chemoreceptors in the regulation of cervical preganglionic sympathetic nerve (PSN) activity was studied in anesthetized and spontaneously breathing cats. PSN efferents which responded to hypoxia were selected for the study. The PSN activity, breath-by-breath inspiratory tidal volume, tracheal PO2 and PCO2, and arterial systemic blood pressure were recorded simultaneously. The responses of PSN efferents to transient changes in and steady-state levels of arterial PO2 and PCO2 and to graded bolus injections of intravenous sodium cyanide (50-100 micrograms), nicotine (50-100 micrograms), and dopamine hydrochloride (30-60 micrograms) were compared before and after bilateral section of carotid sinus nerves (CSN). CSN section raised the base-line PSN activity and practically eliminated the responses to brief pharmacological stimuli, but it did not eliminate the responses to transient changes in and steady-state levels of arterial PO2 and PCO2. However, CSN section diminished PSN responses and abolished ventilatory responses to hypoxia. Thus the PSN response to hypoxia was partly independent of peripheral chemoreflex and of respiratory drive. We conclude that carotid body chemoreflex elicits fast PSN responses and that a moderate decline in arterial PO2 causes an additional slow, direct excitation of sympathetic nervous system. The latter indicates O2 chemosensitivity of the system in the physiological range of arterial PO2. This O2-sensing property may allow sympathetic nervous system to initiate chemoreflex responses independent of the peripheral chemoreceptors.  相似文献   

14.
While orthostatic tachycardia is the hallmark of postural tachycardia syndrome (POTS), orthostasis also initiates increased minute ventilation (Ve) and decreased end-tidal CO(2) in many patients. We hypothesized that chemoreflex sensitivity would be increased in patients with POTS. We therefore measured chemoreceptor sensitivity in 20 POTS (16 women and 4 men) and 14 healthy controls (10 women and 4 men), 16-35 yr old by exposing them to eucapneic hyperoxia (30% O(2)), eucapneic hypoxia (10% O(2)), and hypercapnic hyperoxia (30% O(2) + 5% CO(2)) while supine and during 70° head-upright tilt. Heart rate, mean arterial pressure, O(2) saturation, end-tidal CO(2), and Ve were measured. Peripheral chemoreflex sensitivity was calculated as the difference in Ve during hypoxia compared with room air divided by the change in O(2) saturation. Central chemoreflex sensitivity was determined by the difference in Ve during hypercapnia divided by the change in CO(2). POTS subjects had an increased peripheral chemoreflex sensitivity (in l·min(-1)·%oxygen(-1)) in response to hypoxia (0.42 ± 0.38 vs. 0.19 ± 0.17) but a decreased central chemoreflex sensitivity (l·min(-1)·Torr(-1)) CO(2) response (0.49 ± 0.38 vs. 1.04 ± 0.18) compared with controls. CO(2) sensitivity was also reduced in POTS subjects when supine. POTS patients are markedly sensitized to hypoxia when upright but desensitized to CO(2) while upright or supine. The interactions between orthostatic baroreflex unloading and altered chemoreflex sensitivities may explain the hyperventilation in POTS patients.  相似文献   

15.
Li YC  Wang H  Cao Y  Tang D  Wang GM  Yu SY  Song G  Zhang H 《生理学报》2005,57(3):395-399
本工作旨在观察脑干孤束核内蛋白酪氨酸激酶(protein tyrosine kinase,PTK)是否参与了外周化学感受性反射的呼吸反应调节。实验采用电生理和微量注射相结合的方法,以膈神经放电为观察指标,观察呼吸变化。通过吸入10%氧气(10%O2,90%N2)引导出外周化学感受性反射。在孤束核(nucleus tractus solitarius,NTS)处分别微量注射蛋白酪氨酸激酶的抑制剂,genistein和其非活动性抑制剂daidzein以及AMPA受体阻断剂CNQX,观察这些药物对外周化学感受性反射的影响。结果显示,吸入低氧混合气后,动物呼吸加深加快;在NTS处微量注射CNQX或genistein都会不同程度削弱外周化学感受性反射引起的通气反应,而微量注射daidzein后对反射没有影响。另外,在NTS处微量注射CNQx后再注射genistein,其削弱外周化学感受性反射的作用与单独微量注射CNQx或genistein基本相同,二者并无协同作用。结果提示,NTS处的蛋白酪氨酸激酶对外周化学感受性反射具有一定的调节作用,并且NTS处磷酸化修饰,AMPA受体可能是PTK发挥这种调节作用的途径之一。  相似文献   

16.
Cyclic ventilatory instabilities are widely attributed to an increase in the sensitivity or loop gain of the chemoreflex feedback loop controlling ventilation. A major limitation in the conventional characterization of this feedback loop is the need for labor-intensive methodologies. To overcome this limitation, we developed a method based on trivariate autoregressive modeling using ventilation, end-tidal Pco(2) and Po(2); this method provides for estimation of the overall "loop gain" of the respiratory control system and its components, chemoreflex gain and plant gain. Our method was applied to recordings of spontaneous breathing in 15 anesthetized, tracheostomized, newborn lambs before and after administration of domperidone (a dopamine D(2)-receptor antagonist that increases carotid body sensitivity). We quantified the known increase in hypoxic ventilatory sensitivity in response to domperidone; controller gain for O(2) increased from 0.06 (0.03, 0.09) l·min(-1)·mmHg(-1) to 0.09 (0.08, 0.13) l·min(-1)·mmHg(-1); median (interquartile-range). We also report that domperidone increased the loop gain of the control system more than twofold [0.14 (0.12, 0.22) to 0.40 (0.15, 0.57)]. We observed no significant changes in CO(2) controller gain, or plant gains for O(2) and CO(2). Furthermore, our estimate of the cycle duration of periodic breathing compared favorably with that observed experimentally [measured: 7.5 (7.2, 9.1) vs. predicted: 7.9 (7.0, 9.2) breaths]. Our results demonstrate that model-based analysis of spontaneous breathing can 1) characterize the dynamics of the respiratory control system, and 2) provide a simple tool for elucidating an individual's propensity for ventilatory instability, in turn allowing potential therapies to be directed at the underlying mechanisms.  相似文献   

17.
Ventilatory long-term facilitation (LTF; defined as gradual increase of minute ventilation following repeated hypoxic exposures) is well described in adult mammals and is hypothesized to be a protective mechanism against apnea. In newborns, LTF is absent during the first postnatal days, but its precise developmental pattern is unknown. Accordingly, this study describes this pattern of postnatal development. Additionally, we tested the hypothesis that chronic intermittent hypoxia (CIH) from birth alters this development. LTF was estimated in vivo using whole body plethysmography by exposing rat pups at postnatal days 1, 4, and 10 (P1, P4, and P10) to 10 brief hypoxic cycles (nadir 5% O2) and respiratory recordings during the following 2 h (recovery, 21% O2). Under these conditions, ventilatory LTF (gradual increase of minute ventilation during recovery) was clearly expressed in P10 rats but not in P1 and P4. In a second series of experiments, rat pups were exposed to CIH during the first 10 postnatal days (6 brief cyclic exposures at 5% O2 every 6 min followed by 1 h under normoxia, 24 h a day). Compared with P10 control rats, CIH enhanced hypoxic ventilatory response (estimated during the hypoxic cycles) specifically in male rat pups. Ventilatory LTF was drastically reduced in P10 rats exposed to CIH, which was associated with higher apnea frequency during recovery. We conclude that CIH from birth enhances hypoxic chemoreflex and disrupts LTF development, thus likely contributing to increase apnea frequency.  相似文献   

18.
Somatostatin inhibits the ventilatory response to hypoxia in humans   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
The effects of a 90-min infusion of somatostatin (1 mg/h) on ventilation and the ventilatory responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia were studied in six normal adult males. Minute ventilation (VE) was measured with inductance plethysmography, arterial 02 saturation (SaO2) was measured with ear oximetry, and arterial PCO2 (Paco2) was estimated with a transcutaneous CO2 electrode. The steady-state ventilatory response to hypoxia (delta VE/delta SaO2) was measured in subjects breathing 10.5% O2 in an open circuit while isocapnia was maintained by the addition of CO2. The hypercapnic response (delta VE/delta PaCO2) was measured in subjects breathing first 5% and then 7.5% CO2 (in 52-55% O2). Somatostatin greatly attenuated the hypoxic response (control mean -790 ml x min-1.%SaO2 -1, somatostatin mean -120 ml x min-1.%SaO2 -1; P less than 0.01), caused a small fall in resting ventilation (mean % fall - 11%), but did not affect the hypercapnic response. In three of the subjects progressive ventilatory responses (using rebreathing techniques, dry gas meter, and end-tidal Pco2 analysis) and overall metabolism were measured. Somatostatin caused similar changes (mean fall in hypoxic response -73%; no change in hypercapnic response) and did not alter overall O2 consumption nor CO2 production. These results show an hitherto-unsuspected inhibitory potential of this neuropeptide on the control of breathing; the sparing of the hypercapnic response is suggestive of an action on the carotid body but does not exclude a central effect.  相似文献   

19.
We tested whether hyperbaric O2 (HBO) has an adverse effect on the hypoxic ventilatory drive. Four groups of rats were exposed for 550 min to O2 at 1.67, 1.90, and 2.15 ATA and to air at 1.90 ATA, respectively. Ventilatory parameters (frequency, tidal volume, and minute ventilation) were measured using whole-body plethysmography, before the hyperbaric exposure, immediately after the exposure, and up to 20 days after the exposure. Resting ventilation was not affected after exposure at 1.90 ATA to air or at 1.67 ATA to O2. HBO at 1.90 and 2.15 ATA caused a reduction of frequency and an elevation of tidal volume at different inspired gases: air, 5% CO2 balance O2, 80% O2, and 4.5% O2. However, minute ventilation on the day after the hyperoxic exposure was not different from the control at either air, 5% CO2, or 80% O2 but was markedly attenuated on the first three breaths at 4.5% O2. The hypoxic ventilation decreased to 48 +/- 13 (SD) and 32 + 11% after 1.90 and 2.15 ATA, respectively. The ventilatory parameters recovered in the days after HBO. We conclude that HBO reversibly depresses the hypoxic ventilatory drive, most probably by a direct effect on the carotid O2 chemoreceptors.  相似文献   

20.
Developmental hyperoxia (1-4 wk of 60% O2) causes long-lasting impairment of hypoxic phrenic responses in rats. We hypothesized that shorter or less severe hyperoxic exposures would produce similar changes. Hypoxic phrenic responses were measured in 3- to 5-mo-old, urethane-anesthetized rats exposed to 60% O2 for postnatal day 1 or week 1 or to 30% O2 for postnatal week 1. Whereas 1 day of 60% O2 had no lasting effects (P > 0.05 vs. control), both 1 wk of 60% O2 and 1 wk of 30% O2 decreased adult hypoxic phrenic responses (P < 0.05 vs. control), although the effects of 30% O2 were smaller. Hypoxic ventilatory responses (expressed as the ratio of minute ventilation to metabolic CO2 production) were also reduced in unanesthetized rats (5-10 mo old) exposed to 1 wk of 60% O2 during development (P < 0.05). An age-dependent increase toward normal hypoxic phrenic responses was observed in rats exposed to 1 wk of 60% O2 (P < 0.05), suggesting a degree of spontaneous recovery not observed after 1 mo of 60% O2. These data indicate that long-lasting effects of developmental hyperoxia depend on the level and duration of hyperoxic exposure.  相似文献   

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