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1.
We hypothesized that, in male rats, 10% fructose in drinking water would depress ventilatory responsiveness to acute hypoxia (10% O2 in N2) and hypercapnia (5% CO2 in O2) that would be depressed further by exposure to intermittent hypoxia. Minute ventilation (Ve) in air and in response to acute hypoxia and hypercapnia was evaluated in 10 rats before fructose feeding (FF), during 6 wk of FF, and after FF was removed for 2 wk. During FF, five rats were exposed to intermittent air and five to intermittent hypoxia for 13 days. Six rats given tap water acted as control and were exposed to intermittent air and subsequently intermittent hypoxia. In FF rats, plasma insulin levels increased threefold in the rats exposed to intermittent hypoxia and during washout returned to levels observed in rats exposed to intermittent air. During FF, ventilatory responsiveness to acute hypoxia was depressed because of decreased tidal volume (Vt) responsiveness. During washout, Ve decreased as a result of decreased Vt and frequency of breathing, and the ventilatory responsiveness to hypoxia in intermittent hypoxia rats did not recover. In all rats, the ventilatory responses to hypercapnia were decreased during FF and recovered after washout because of an increased Vt responsiveness. In the control group, hypoxic responsiveness was not depressed after intermittent hypoxia and was augmented after washout. Thus FF attenuated the ventilatory responsiveness of conscious rats to hypoxia and hypercapnia. Intermittent hypoxia interacted with FF to increase insulin levels and depress ventilatory responses to acute hypoxia that remained depressed during washout.  相似文献   

2.
During ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia (VAH), time-dependent increases in ventilation lower Pco(2) levels, and this persists on return to normoxia. We hypothesized that plasticity in the caudal nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) contributes to VAH, as the NTS receives the first synapse from the carotid body chemoreceptor afferents and also contains CO(2)-sensitive neurons. We lesioned cells in the caudal NTS containing the neurokinin-1 receptor by microinjecting the neurotoxin saporin conjugated to substance P and measured ventilatory responses in awake, unrestrained rats 18 days later. Lesions did not affect hypoxic or hypercapnic ventilatory responses in normoxic control rats, in contrast to published reports for similar lesions in other central chemosensitive areas. Also, lesions did not affect the hypercapnic ventilatory response in chronically hypoxic rats (inspired Po(2) = 90 Torr for 7 days). These results suggest functional differences between central chemoreceptor sites. However, lesions significantly increased ventilation in normoxia or acute hypoxia in chronically hypoxic rats. Hence, chronic hypoxia increases an inhibitory effect of neurokinin-1 receptor neurons in the NTS on ventilatory drive, indicating that these neurons contribute to plasticity during chronic hypoxia, although such plasticity does not explain VAH.  相似文献   

3.
Chronic exposure to hypoxia results in a time-dependent increase in ventilation called ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia. Increased O(2) sensitivity of arterial chemoreceptors contributes to ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia, but other mechanisms have also been hypothesized. We designed this experiment to determine whether central nervous system processing of peripheral chemoreceptor input is affected by chronic hypoxic exposure. The carotid sinus nerve was stimulated supramaximally at different frequencies (0.5-20 Hz, 0.2-ms duration) during recording of phrenic nerve activity in two groups of anesthetized, ventilated, vagotomized rats. In the chronically hypoxic group (7 days at 80 Torr inspired PO(2)), phrenic burst frequency (f(R), bursts/min) was significantly higher than in the normoxic control group with carotid sinus nerve stimulation frequencies >5 Hz. In the chronically hypoxic group, peak amplitude of integrated phrenic nerve activity ( integral Phr, percent baseline) or change in integral Phr was significantly greater at stimulation frequencies between 5 and 17 Hz, and minute phrenic activity ( integral Phr x f(R)) was significantly greater at stimulation frequencies >5 Hz. These experiments show that chronic hypoxia facilitates the translation of arterial chemoreceptor afferent input to ventilatory efferent output through a mechanism in the central nervous system.  相似文献   

4.
The abundance of neuropeptide Y (NPY)-, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)-, substance P (SP)-, and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP)-immunoreactive nerve fibers in the carotid body was examined in chronically hypercapnic hypoxic rats (10% O2 and 6-7% CO2 for 3 months), and the distribution and abundance of these four peptidergic fibers were compared with those of previously reported hypocapnic- and isocapnic hypoxic carotid bodies to evaluate the effect of arterial CO2 tension. The vasculature in the carotid body of chronically hypercapnic hypoxic rats was found to be enlarged in comparison with that of normoxic control rats, but the rate of vascular enlargement was smaller than that in the previously reported hypocapnic- and isocapnic hypoxic carotid bodies. In the chronically hypercapnic hypoxic carotid body, the density per unit area of parenchymal NPY fibers was significantly increased, and that of VIP fibers was unchanged, although the density of NPY and VIP fibers in the previously reportetd chronically hypocapnic and isocapnic hypoxic carotid bodies was opposite to that in hypercapnic hypoxia as observed in this study. The density of SP and CGRP fibers was decreased. These results along with previous reports suggest that different levels of arterial CO2 tension change the peptidergic innervation in the carotid body during chronically hypoxic exposure, and altered peptidergic innervation of the chronically hypercapnic hypoxic carotid body is one feature of hypoxic adaptation.  相似文献   

5.
Carotid bodies are functionally immature at birth and exhibit poor sensitivity to hypoxia. Previous studies have shown that continuous hypoxia at birth impairs hypoxic sensing at the carotid body. Intermittent hypoxia (IH) is more frequently experienced in neonatal life. Previous studies on adult animals have shown that IH facilitates hypoxic sensing at the carotid bodies. On the basis of these studies, in the present study we tested the hypothesis that neonatal IH facilitates hypoxic sensing of the carotid body and augments ventilatory response to hypoxia. Experiments were performed on 2-day-old rat pups that were exposed to 16 h of IH soon after the birth. The IH paradigm consisted of 15 s of 5% O2 (nadir) followed by 5 min of 21% O2 (9 episodes/h). In one group of experiments (IH and control, n = 6 pups each), sensory activity was recorded from ex vivo carotid bodies, and in the other (IH and control, n = 7 pups each) ventilation was monitored in unanesthetized pups by plethysmography. In control pups, sensory response of the carotid body was weak and was slow in onset (approximately 100 s). In contrast, carotid body sensory response to hypoxia was greater and the time course of the response was faster (approximately 30 s) in IH compared with control pups. The magnitude of the hypoxic ventilatory response was greater in IH compared with control pups, whereas changes in O2 consumption and CO2 production during hypoxia were comparable between both groups. The magnitude of ventilatory stimulation by hyperoxic hypercapnia (7% CO2-balance O2), however, was the same between both groups of pups. These results demonstrate that neonatal IH facilitates carotid body sensory response to hypoxia and augments hypoxic ventilatory chemoreflex.  相似文献   

6.
Effects on ventilatory responses to progressive isocapnic hypoxia of a synthetic potent progestin, chlormadinone acetate (CMA), were determined in the halothane-anesthetized male rat. Ventilation during the breathing of hyperoxic gas was largely unaffected by treatment with CMA when carotid chemoreceptor afferents were kept intact. The sensitivity to hypoxia evaluated by hyperbolic regression analysis of the response curve did not differ between the control and CMA groups. The reduction of ventilation after bilateral section of the carotid sinus nerve (CSN) in hyperoxia was less severe in CMA-treated than in untreated animals. Furthermore, the CMA-treated rats showed a larger increase in ventilation during the hypoxia test and a lower PO2 break point for ventilatory depression. Inhibition of hypoxic ventilatory depression by CMA persisted even after the denervation of CSN. We conclude that exogenous progestin likely protects regulatory mechanism(s) for respiration against hypoxic depression through a stimulating action independent of carotid chemoreceptor afferents and without a change in the sensitivity of the ventilatory response to hypoxia.  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.
Ventilatory responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia were measured by indirect plethysmography in unanesthetized unrestrained adult rats injected neonatally with capsaicin (50 mg/kg) or vehicle. Such capsaicin treatment ablates a subpopulation of primary afferent fibers containing substance P and various other neuropeptides. Ventilation was measured while the rats breathed air, 12% O2 in N2, 8% O2 in N2, 5% CO2 in O2, or 8% CO2 in O2. Neonatal treatment with capsaicin caused marked alterations in both the magnitude and composition of the hypoxic but not hypercapnic ventilatory response. The increase in minute ventilation evoked by hypoxia in the vehicle-treated rats resulted entirely from an increase in respiratory frequency. In the capsaicin-treated rats the hypoxic ventilatory response was significantly reduced owing to an attenuation of the frequency response. Although both groups responded to hypoxia with a shortening in inspiratory and expiratory times, rats treated with capsaicin displayed less shortening of both respiratory phases. By contrast, hypercapnia induced a brisk ventilatory response in the capsaicin-treated group that was similar in magnitude and pattern to that observed in the vehicle-treated group. Analysis of the components of the hypercapnic ventilatory responses revealed no significant differences between the two groups. We, therefore, conclude that neuropeptide-containing C-fibers are essential for the tachypnic component of the ventilatory response to hypoxia but not hypercapnia.  相似文献   

9.
In awake animals, our laboratory recently showed that the hypoxic ventilatory response of adult male (but not female) rats previously subjected to neonatal maternal separation (NMS) is 25% greater than controls (Genest SE, Gulemetova R, Laforest S, Drolet G, and Kinkead R. J Physiol 554: 543-557, 2004). To begin mechanistic investigations of the effects of this neonatal stress on respiratory control development, we tested the hypothesis that, in male rats, NMS enhances central integration of carotid body chemoafferent signals. Experiments were performed on two groups of adult male rats. Pups subjected to NMS were placed in a temperature-controlled incubator 3 h/day from postnatal day 3 to postnatal day 12. Control pups were undisturbed. At adulthood (8-10 wk), rats were anesthetized (urethane; 1.6 g/kg), paralyzed, and ventilated with a hyperoxic gas mixture [inspired O2 fraction (Fi(O2)) = 0.5], and phrenic nerve activity was recorded. The first series of experiments aimed to demonstrate that NMS-related enhancement of the inspiratory motor output (phrenic) response to hypoxia occurs in anesthetized animals also. In this series, rats were exposed to moderate, followed by severe, isocapnic hypoxia (Fi(O2) = 0.12 and 0.08, respectively, 5 min each). NMS enhanced both the frequency and amplitude components of the phrenic response to hypoxia relative to controls, thereby validating the use of this approach. In a second series of experiments, NMS increased the amplitude (but not the frequency) response to unilateral carotid sinus nerve stimulation (stimulation frequency range: 0.5-33 Hz). We conclude that enhancement of central integration of carotid body afferent signal contributes to the larger hypoxic ventilatory response observed in NMS rats.  相似文献   

10.
We have assessed the expression, molecular identification and functional role of Na+ channels (Na(v)) in carotid bodies (CB) obtained from normoxic and chronically hypoxic adult rats. Veratridine evoked release of catecholamines (CA) from an in vitro preparation of intact CBs obtained from normoxic animals, the response being Ca2+ and Na+-dependent and sensitive to tetrodotoxin (TTX). TTX inhibited by 25-50% the CA release response evoked by graded hypoxia. Immunoblot assays demonstrated the presence of Na(v)alpha-subunit (c. 220 kDa) in crude homogenates from rat CBs, being evident an up-regulation (60%) of this protein in the CBs obtained from chronically hypoxic rats (10% O2; 7 days). This up-regulation was accompanied by an enhanced TTX-sensitive release response to veratridine, and by an enhanced ventilatory response to acute hypoxic stimuli. RT-PCR studies demonstrated the expression of mRNA for Na(v)1.1, Na(v)1.2, Na(v)1.3, Na(v)1.6 and Na(v)1.7 isoforms. At least three isoforms, Na(v)1.1, Na(v)1.3 and Na(v)1.6 co-localized with tyrosine hydroxylase in all chemoreceptor cells. RT-PCR and immunocytochemistry indicated that Na(v)1.1 isoform was up-regulated by chronic hypoxia in chemoreceptor cells. We conclude that Na(v) up-regulation represents an adaptive mechanism to increase chemoreceptor sensitivity during acclimatization to sustained hypoxia as evidenced by enhanced ventilatory responses to acute hypoxic tests.  相似文献   

11.
The objective of the present study was to examine the impact of early stages of lung injury on ventilatory control by hypoxia and hypercapnia. Lung injury was induced with intratracheal instillation of bleomycin (BM; 1 unit) in adult, male Sprague-Dawley rats. Control animals underwent sham surgery with saline instillation. Five days after the injections, lung injury was present in BM-treated animals as evidenced by increased neutrophils and protein levels in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, as well as by changes in lung histology and computed tomography images. There was no evidence of pulmonary fibrosis, as indicated by lung collagen content. Basal core body temperature, arterial Po(2), and arterial Pco(2) were comparable between both groups of animals. Ventilatory responses to hypoxia (12% O(2)) and hypercapnia (7% CO(2)) were measured by whole body plethysmography in unanesthetized animals. Baseline respiratory rate and the hypoxic ventilatory response were significantly higher in BM-injected compared with control animals (P = 0.003), whereas hypercapnic ventilatory response was not statistically different. In anesthetized, spontaneously breathing animals, response to brief hyperoxia (Dejours' test, an index of peripheral chemoreceptor sensitivity) and neural hypoxic ventilatory response were augmented in BM-exposed relative to control animals, as measured by diaphragmatic electromyelograms. The enhanced hypoxic sensitivity persisted following bilateral vagotomy, but was abolished by bilateral carotid sinus nerve transection. These data demonstrate that afferent sensory input from the carotid body contributes to a selective enhancement of hypoxic ventilatory drive in early lung injury in the absence of pulmonary fibrosis and arterial hypoxemia.  相似文献   

12.
Mechanisms of ventilatory acclimatization to chronic hypoxia remain unclear. To determine whether the sensitivity of peripheral chemoreceptors to hypoxia increases during acclimatization, we measured ventilatory and carotid sinus nerve responses to isocapnic hypoxia in seven cats exposed to simulated altitude of 15,000 ft (barometric pressure = 440 Torr) for 48 h. A control group (n = 7) was selected for hypoxic ventilatory responses matched to the preacclimatized measurements of the experimental group. Exposure to 48 h of hypobaric hypoxia produced acclimatization manifested as decrease in end-tidal PCO2 (PETCO2) in normoxia (34.5 +/- 0.9 Torr before, 28.9 +/- 1.2 after the exposure) as well as in hypoxia (28.1 +/- 1.9 Torr before, 21.8 +/- 1.9 after). Acclimatization produced an increase in hypoxic ventilatory response, measured as the shape parameter A (24.9 +/- 2.6 before, 35.2 +/- 5.6 after; P less than 0.05), whereas values in controls remained unchanged (25.7 +/- 3.2 and 23.1 +/- 2.7; NS). Hypoxic exposure was associated with an increase in the carotid body response to hypoxia, similarly measured as the shape parameter A (24.2 +/- 4.7 in control, 44.5 +/- 8.2 in acclimatized cats). We also found an increased dependency of ventilation on carotid body function (PETCO2 increased after unilateral section of carotid sinus nerve in acclimatized but not in control animals). These results suggest that acclimatization is associated with increased hypoxic ventilatory response accompanied by enhanced peripheral chemoreceptor responsiveness, which may contribute to the attendant rise in ventilation.  相似文献   

13.
In anesthetized rats, increases in phrenic nerve amplitude and frequency during brief periods of hypoxia are followed by a reduction in phrenic nerve burst frequency [posthypoxia frequency decline (PHFD)]. We investigated the effects of chronic exposure to hypoxia on PHFD and on peripheral and central O2-sensing mechanisms. In Inactin-anesthetized (100 mg/kg) Sprague-Dawley rats, phrenic nerve discharge and arterial pressure responses to 10 s N2 inhalation were recorded after exposure to hypoxia (10 +/- 0.5% O2) for 6-14 days. Compared with rats maintained at normoxia, PHFD was abolished in chronic hypoxic rats. Because of inhibition of PHFD, the increased phrenic burst frequency and amplitude after N2 inhalation persisted for 1.8-2.8 times longer in chronic hypoxic (70 s) compared with normoxic (25-40 s) rats (P < 0.05). After acute bilateral carotid body denervation, N2 inhalation produced a short depression of phrenic nerve discharge in both chronic hypoxic and normoxic rats. However, the degree and duration of depression of phrenic nerve discharge was smaller in chronic hypoxic compared with normoxic rats (P < 0.05). We conclude that after exposure to chronic hypoxia, a reduction in PHFD contributes to an increased duration of the acute hypoxic ventilatory response in anesthetized rats. Furthermore, after exposure to chronic hypoxia, the central network responsible for respiration is more resistant to the depressant effects of acute hypoxia in anesthetized rats.  相似文献   

14.
In adult humans the ventilatory response to sustained hypoxia (VRSH) is biphasic, characterized by an initial brisk increase, due to peripheral chemoreceptor (PC) stimulation, followed by a decline attributed to central depressant action of hypoxia. To study the effects of selective stimulation of PC on the ventilatory response pattern to hypoxia, the VRSH was evaluated after pretreatment with almitrine (A), a PC stimulant. Eight subjects were pretreated with A (75 mg po) or placebo (P) on 2 days in a single-blind manner. Two hours after drug administration, they breathed, in succession, room air (10 min), O2 (5 min), room air (5 min), hypoxia [25 min, arterial O2 saturation (SaO2) = 80%], O2 (5 min), and room air (5 min). End-tidal CO2 was kept constant at the normoxic base-line values. Inspiratory minute ventilation (VI) and breathing patterns were measured over the last 2 min of each period and during minutes 3-5 of hypoxia, and nadirs in VI were assessed just before and after O2 exposure. Independent of the day, the VRSH was biphasic. With P and A pretreatment, early hypoxia increased VI 4.6 +/- 1 and 14.2 +/- 1 (SE) l/min, respectively, from values obtained during the preceding room-air period. On A day the hypoxic ventilatory decline was significantly larger than that on P day, and on both days the decline was a constant fraction of the acute hypoxic response.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Time-dependent effect of hypoxia on carotid body chemosensory function   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
The time-dependent effects of hypoxia on the discharge rate carotid chemoreceptors were measured in anesthetized cats. Hypoxic exposure of two different durations were used: a short-term exposure (2-3 h) was used to measure the response of the same carotid chemoreceptors; and a long-term exposure (28 days at inspired PO2 of 70 Torr) to study carotid chemoreceptor properties in one group of cats relative to those of a control group. In the chronically hypoxic and control groups, determinations were made of the 1) steady-state responses to four levels of arterial PO2 (PaO2) at constant levels of arterial PCO2; 2) steady-state responses to acute hypercapnia during hyperoxia; and 3) maximal discharge rates during anoxia. We found that the acute responses of carotid chemoreceptor afferents to a given level of hypoxia (PaO2 = 30-40 Torr) did not significantly change within 2-3 h. After long-term exposure the carotid chemoreceptor responses to hypoxia significantly increased, with no significant changes in the hypercapnic response and in the maximal discharge rate during anoxia. We conclude that isocapnic hypoxia may not elicit a sufficient cellular response within 2-3 h in the cat carotid body to sensitize the O2 responsive mechanism, but hypoxia of longer duration will sensitize such a mechanism, thereby augmenting the chemosensory activity.  相似文献   

16.
To clarify the diabetes mellitus (DM)-associated changes in the respiratory neuronal control system, acute ventilatory responses to progressively increasing hypercapnia (6%) and hypoxia (10%) were compared between normal (N) and streptozotocin (60 mg/kg, i.v.) -DM rats for a long period up to 28 weeks. The same comparison was conducted during the anesthetic state induced with pentobarbital (35 mg/kg, i.p.). During the conscious state, basic ventilatory parameters, such as respiratory rate, tidal volume and minute ventilation, were not impaired in DM rats, but ventilatory responses to hypercapnia and hypoxia were reduced significantly at 16 weeks and later after streptozotocin injection. The reduced responses in DM rats were not recovered by insulin treatment (5-6 U/body, s.c., daily). During the anesthetic state, both hypoxic and hypercapnic responses were depressed more intensely in N rats than in DM rats, resulting in an equivalent level of the response in the two groups. The present study demonstrated that ventilatory responses to hypercapnia and hypoxia were reduced in a long-term DM condition. This may be derived from the impairment of the peripheral and central chemosensitivity. The reduction in ventilatory responses was exaggerated during the anesthetic state.  相似文献   

17.
Hypoxic ventilatory and phrenic responses are reduced in adult rats reared in hyperoxia (60% O(2)) for the first month of life but not after hyperoxia as adults. In this study, we identified the developmental window for susceptibility to hyperoxia. Phrenic nerve responses to hypoxia were recorded in anesthetized, vagotomized, paralyzed, and ventilated Sprague-Dawley rats (aged 3-4 mo) exposed to 60% O(2) for the first, second, third, or fourth postnatal week. Responses were compared with control rats and with rats exposed to 60% O(2) for the first month of life. Phrenic minute activity (burst amplitude x frequency) increased less during isocapnic hypoxia (arterial PO(2) = 60, 50, and 40 Torr) in rats exposed to hyperoxia for the first or second week, or the first month, of life (P < 0.01 vs. control). Functional impairment caused by 1 wk of hyperoxia diminished with increasing age of exposure (P = 0.005). Adult hypoxic phrenic responses are impaired by 1 wk of hyperoxia during the first and second postnatal weeks in rats, indicating a developmental window coincident with carotid chemoreceptor maturation.  相似文献   

18.
Zhuang J  Xu F  Campen M  Hernandez J  Shi S  Wang R 《Life sciences》2006,78(22):2654-2661
Hypoxia inhibits K+ channels of chemoreceptors of the carotid body (CB), which is reversed by transient carbon monoxide (CO), suggesting an inhibitory effect of CO on hypoxic stimulation of carotid chemoreceptors. Therefore, we hypothesized that the ventilatory responses to hypoxic stimulation of the CB might be depressed in intact rats by transient inhalation of CO. Anesthetized, spontaneously breathing rats were exposed to room air, and 1 min of 11% O2 (HYP) and CO (0.25-2%) alone and in combination (HYP+CO). We found that transient CO did not affect baseline cardiorespiratory variables, but significantly attenuated hypoxic ventilatory augmentation, predominantly via reduction of tidal volume. To distinguish whether this CO modulation occurs at the CB or within the central nervous system, the cardiorespiratory responses to electrical stimulation of the fastigial nucleus (FN), a cerebellar nucleus known excitatory to respiration, were compared before and during transient CO. Our results showed that the FN-mediated cardiorespiratory responses were not significantly changed by transient CO exposure. To evaluate the effect of CO accumulation, we also compared baseline cardiorespiratory responses to 5 min of 1% and 2% CO, respectively. Interestingly, only the latter produced a biphasic ventilatory response (initial increase followed by decrease) associated with hypotension. We conclude that eupneic breathing in anesthetized rat was not affected by transient CO, but was altered by prolonged exposure to higher levels of CO. Moreover, transient CO depresses hypoxic ventilatory responses mainly through peripherally inhibiting hypoxic stimulation of carotid chemoreceptors.  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
Morphological changes in the rat carotid bodies 1, 2, 4, and 8 weeks after the termination of chronically hypocapnic hypoxia (10% O2 for 8 weeks) were examined by means of morphometry and immunohistochemistry. The rat carotid bodies after 8 weeks of hypoxic exposure were enlarged several fold with vascular expansion. The carotid bodies 1 and 2 weeks after the termination of 8 weeks of hypoxic exposure were diminished in size, although their diameter remained larger than the normoxic controls. The expanded vasculature in chronically hypoxic carotid bodies returned to the normoxic control state. In the carotid bodies 1 week after the termination of chronic hypoxia, the density of NPY fibers was remarkably increased and that of VIP fibers was dramatically decreased in comparison with the density in chronically hypoxic carotid bodies. In the carotid bodies 2 and 4 weeks after the termination of hypoxia, the density of SP and CGRP fibers was gradually increased. In the carotid bodies 8 weeks after the termination of hypoxia, the appearance of the carotid body returned to a nearly normoxic state, and the density of SP, CGRP, VIP, and NPY fibers also recovered to that of normoxic controls. These results suggest that the morphological changes in the recovering carotid bodies start at a relatively early period after the termination of chronic hypoxia, and a part of these processes may be under the control of peptidergic innervation.  相似文献   

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