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1.
Reflex respiratory responses to brief carotid baroreceptor stimuli in vagotomized pentobarbital-anesthetized cats were characterized and compared with those reported previously for chloralose-anesthetized dogs. To eliminate effects due to the anesthetic choice, dogs were reexamined under pentobarbital. Stimuli were applied to the isolated carotid sinus (CS) of both animals within a single respiratory phase. The stimuli were either steps triggered after one of four delays (5, 25, 50, and 75% of the control phase duration) and terminated at the end of the phase or pulses lasting 300-500 ms. In cats, 80-mmHg steps during inspiration shortened inspiratory duration by 23.2*, 25.0*, 20.4*, and 4.1% (*P less than 0.01) at the above four delays, respectively; inspired volume decreased by 21.4*, 18.0*, 8.0*, and 2.2%. Steps during expiration lengthened expiration by 38.4*, 37.1*, 21.9*, and 3.4%; expired volume changed less than 4%. Qualitatively, similar responses were obtained with steps 40 mmHg in amplitude. In dogs, 40-mmHg stimuli lengthened both inspiration (by 12.8*, 8.9*, -1.2, and -2.5%) and expiration (by 75.2*, 57.9*, 54.0*, and 61.4*%) but tidal volume did not change. Similar differences were observed when pulses were used. Selective baroreceptor denervation in the cat and occipital arterial occlusion in the dog confirmed that the responses were not chemoreceptor mediated. We conclude that although CS baroreceptor activity inhibits ventilation in both cats and dogs, the pattern of the responses is strongly species dependent.  相似文献   

2.
Respiratory responses arising from both chemical stimulation of vascularly isolated aortic body (AB) and carotid body (CB) chemoreceptors and electrical stimulation of aortic nerve (AN) and carotid sinus nerve (CSN) afferents were compared in the anesthetized dog. Respiratory reflexes were measured as changes in inspiratory duration (TI), expiratory duration (TE), and peak averaged phrenic nerve activity (PPNG). Tonic AN and AB stimulations shortened TI and TE with no change in PPNG, while tonic CSN and CB stimulations shortened TE, increased PPNG, and transiently lengthened TI. Phasic AB and AN stimulations throughout inspiration shortened TI with no changes in PPNG or the following TE; however, similar phasic stimulations of the CB and CSN increased both TI and PPNG and decreased the following TE. Phasic AN stimulation during expiration decreased TE and the following TI with no change in PPNG. Similar stimulations of the CB and CSN decreased TE; however, the following TI and PPNG were increased. These findings differ from those found in the cat and suggest that aortic chemoreceptors affect mainly phase timing, while carotid chemoreceptors affect both timing and respiratory drive.  相似文献   

3.
The effects of CO2 concentration on the timing of inspiratory duration (TI) and expiratory duration (TE) and the responses to lung inflation were studied in decerebrate paralyzed cats. With lung volume held at functional residual capacity during the breath cycle, hypercapnia (fractional concentration of inspired CO2 = 0.04) caused variable changes in TI and significant increases in TE. To obtain the Breuer-Hering threshold relationship [tidal volume (VT) vs. TI] and the timing relationship between TE and the preceding TI (TE vs. TI), ramp inflations of various sizes were used to terminate inspiration at different times in the breath cycle. Hypercapnia caused the VT vs. TI curves to shift in an upward direction so that at higher lung volumes TI was lengthened. Also, the slope of the TE vs. TI relationship was increased. The results suggest that hypercapnia diminished the sensitivity of the Breuer-Hering reflex to the lung volume, thus allowing volume to increase with little effect on TI. In addition, TE appears to become more sensitive to changes in the preceding TI. A model is presented which provides a possible neural mechanism for these responses.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of spontaneous swallows on breathing before, during, and after solitary swallows were investigated in 13 awake goats. Inspiratory (TI) and expiratory (TE) time and respiratory output were determined from inspiratory airflow [tidal volume (VT)] and peak diaphragmatic activity (Dia(peak)). The onset time for 1,128 swallows was determined from pharyngeal muscle electrical activity. During inspiration, the later the swallowing onset, the greater increase in TI and VT, whereas there was no significant effect on TE and Dia(peak). Swallows in early expiration increased the preceding TI and reduced TE, whereas later in expiration swallows increased TE. After expiratory swallows, TI and VT were reduced whereas minimal changes in Dia(peak) were observed. Phase response analysis revealed a within-breath, phase-dependent effect of swallowing on breathing, resulting in a resetting of the respiratory oscillator. However, the shift in timing in the breaths after a swallow was not parallel, further demonstrating a respiratory phase-dependent effect on breathing. We conclude that, in the awake state, within- and multiple-breath effects on respiratory timing and output are induced and/or required in the coordination of breathing and swallowing.  相似文献   

5.
We exposed two awake dogs with a chronic tracheostomy and the cervical vagus nerves exteriorized in skin loops to 1.0 ppm of ozone (O3) for 2 h at intervals of 4 wk. We measured ventilatory variables before and after O3 exposure during rest and exercise before and after vagal block. We compared the effects of vagal blockade, exercise, and O3 on the primary determinants of breathing pattern (VT/TI, VT/TE, TI, and TE) in each of three conditions: base line (steady state), during hypercapnia, and after inhalation of 1% histamine. Under base-line conditions, O3 increased respiratory rate and decreased tidal volume (VT) by shortening time of expiration (TE) and time of inspiration (TI) without affecting VT/TI, an indicator of the neural drive to breathing. During progressive hypercapnia, O3 shortened TE and TI by effects both on tonic (nonvolume-related) and on phasic (volume-related) vagal inputs, and only the latter were prevented completely by cooling of the vagus nerves. Histamine-induced tachypnea was increased by O3 and was totally blocked by cooling the vagus nerves. We conclude that O3 shortens the timing of respiration without increasing ventilatory drive, shortens TI and TE through vagal and nonvagal pathways, increases tonic nonvagal and phasic vagal inputs, and stimulates more than one vagal fiber type.  相似文献   

6.
The first-breath (neural) effects of graded resistive loads added separately during inspiration and expiration was studied in seven anesthetized cats before and after bilateral vagotomy. Additions of airflow resistance during inspiration reduced the volume inspired (VI) and increased inspiratory duration (TI). The duration of the ensuing unloaded expiration (TE) was unchanged. Vagotomy eliminated the TI modulation with inspiratory loads. Tracheal occlusion at the onset of inspiration yielded TI values similar to the fixed values observed following vagotomy. Resistive loads added during expiration produced similar results. Expired volume (VE) decreased and (TE) increased approaching the values obtained after vagotomy. Unlike the inspiratory resistive loads, loading during expiration results in an upward shift in the functional residual capacity (FRC). The FRC shift produces a time lag between the onset of diaphragmatic (EMG) activity and the initiation of airflow of the next (unloaded) inspiration. These studies suggest separate volume-time relationships for the inspiratory and expiratory phases of the breathing cycle. Both relationships are dependent upon vagally mediated volume feedback.  相似文献   

7.
A stretch of the walls of the thoracic aorta, performed in vagotomized cats without obstructing aortic flow, induces increases in heart rate, myocardial contractility, and arterial pressure. These reflex responses are still present after high spinal section. Cats under chloralose-urethane anesthesia were vagotomized and one carotid sinus was isolated and perfused with arterial blood at constant flow. The contralateral carotid sinus nerve and both aortic nerves were sectioned. A stretch of the walls of the thoracic aorta between the 7th and 10th intercostal arteries induced a reflex increase in mean arterial pressure 29 +/- 2 mmHg (mean +/- SE). Stepwise increases of carotid sinus pressure (CSP) or electrical stimulation of the carotid sinus nerve induced stepwise decreases of this reflex response. At maximal baroreceptor stimulation (CSP 212 +/- 9 mmHg) the reflex response to aortic stretch was reduced by 42%. These experiments show that this spinal cardiovascular reflex is at least partially under the inhibitory control of the baroreceptor input.  相似文献   

8.
The pontine respiratory group (PRG) facilitates the mechanism for terminating the inspiratory phase but may influence other phases in the respiratory cycle as well. We determined the effects of PRG lesions on the response of the respiratory cycle to superior laryngeal nerve stimulation delivered in each phase of the cycle in decerebrate, vagotomized, paralyzed, and ventilated cats (n = 6). We measured the duration of inspiration (TI) and expiration (TE) for three breaths before and in the perturbed breath and TI for three breaths after the perturbation. The delay to next inspiration was plotted against the phase at which the stimulus was delivered. Before lesioning, premature inspiratory termination was followed by phase-dependent shortening of TE. After lesioning, premature inspiratory termination did not systematically change the following TE. Breath-by-breath variability (measured 50 breaths) increased and stimulus after-effects (prolonged TI in the subsequent cycle) were augmented following lesions. These data indicate that the PRG plays an important role in the control of TE after perturbation and in the stability of the respiratory central pattern generator.  相似文献   

9.
The basic ventilation values - tidal volume (VT), breathing frequency (f), minute ventilation (VE) and the duration of inspiration (TI) and expiration (TE) -- were determined in adult male rats. The range of these values is given and the pattern of breathing is defined as the relationship between VE and VT, which in the rat is linear throughout its entire range. The role of TI and TE in changing f in the rat were evaluated. The breathing pattern of the rat was compared with data for the rabbit and man, using percentual expression of the basic values. A shift of the breathing pattern to higher f values was observed in rats with experimental lung diseases. In these rats, the inhalation of 100% O2 shifted the pattern of breathing markedly to lower VE values, though not to values comparable with the controls. Bilateral cervical vagotomy was followed by a pronouced decrease in f, an increase in VT and T1 persisted even after vagotomy, however; it can be assumed that this relationship is effected either by means of receptors in the chest muscles, or by the direct action of CO2 which is used to stimulate breathing, on the bulbopontine pacemaker.  相似文献   

10.
Effects of intercostal muscle stimulation were studied in 2- to 7-day-old kittens under ketamine-acepromazine anesthesia. Animals were vagotomized, paralyzed, and artificially ventilated. Stimuli applied during inspiration (TI) inhibited this phase. Stimulus strength necessary for TI inhibition decreased with time. However, an all-or-nothing effect was not always observed. Stimulation during expiration (TE) prolonged this phase. The responsiveness increased with increasing stimulus delay. The effects of intercostal muscle stimulation were compared with those recorded during saphenous nerve stimulation. Stimulation during TI prolonged this phase. Phrenic activity increased after a short-lasting decrease in the on-going activity. Stimulation during the first 50% of TE had variable effects, whereas stimulation with longer delay shortened this phase. Our results indicated that the pattern of breathing in newborns can be affected by both intercostal muscle and other somatic efferents. However, the mechanisms controlling respiratory timing may differ in newborns and in adults. Different effects of respiratory muscle and saphenous nerve stimulation suggest different transmitters involved or different sites of interaction of these inputs with the medullary respiratory rhythm generator.  相似文献   

11.
Respiratory effects of positive and negative pressure breathing were studied in 1- and 4-day-old rabbit pups anesthetized with ketamine (50 mg/kg, im) and acepromazine (3 mg/kg, im). We recorded tidal volume (VT), tracheal pressure (Ptr), and integrated diaphragmatic EMG (DiEMG). Inspiratory (TI) and expiratory time (TE) were measured from the records of DiEMG. During breathing with increased Ptr by 1 or 2 cmH2O, VT, minute ventilation (VE), and respiratory rate (f) decreased. Changes in f relied on a TE prolongation. Neither DiEMG nor its rate of rise (DiEMGt) were affected. Except for VT decrease during positive Ptr, all other effects disappeared after vagotomy. Our results indicate that an increase in tonic vagal activity interacts with the mechanisms controlling TE and has no effect on depth and duration of inspiration. When Ptr decreased by 1 and 2 cmH2O, VE increased due to an increase in f. Increase in f relied on shortening of both TI and TE; the TE effect being more pronounced. DiEMG and DiEMGt also increased. Adverse effects of lung deflation and vagotomy strongly suggest that the respiratory reflex stimulation due to decrease in Ptr does not rely on inhibition of the slowly adapting stretch receptor activity. Therefore other excitatory vagal inputs must be responsible for this response. We propose two vagally mediated inputs: the irritant and/or the cardiac receptors.  相似文献   

12.
The purpose of this study was to determine if the increase in ventilation induced by hypoxic stimulation of the carotid bodies (CB) persists after cessation of the stimulus in humans. I reasoned that a short-term potentiation (STP) of breathing, sometimes called an "afterdischarge," could be unmasked by combining hypoxia with exercise, because ventilation increases synergistically under these conditions. Seven young healthy men performed mild bicycle exercise (30% peak power) while breathing O2 for 1.5 min ("control" state), and their CB were then stimulated by 1.5 min of hypoxic exercise (10% O2--balance N2). CB stimulation was then terminated by changing the inspirate back to O2 as exercise continued. Inspiratory and expiratory duration (TI and TE) and inspiratory flow and its time integral [tidal volume (VT)] were measured with a pneumotachometer. Inspired minute ventilation (VI) and mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI) declined exponentially after the cessation of CB stimulation, with first-order time constants of 28.6 +/- 6.7 and 24.6 +/- 1.6 (SD) s, respectively. The slow decay of VI was due primarily to potentiation of both TI and TE, although the effect on the latter predominated. Additional experiments in six subjects showed that brief intense CB stimulation with four to five breaths of N2 during mild exercise induced STP of similar magnitude to that observed in the hypoxic exercise experiments. Finally, the imposition of hyperoxia during air breathing exercise at a level of respiratory drive similar to that induced by the hypoxic exercise did not change VI significantly.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
Negative upper airway (UAW) pressure inhibits diaphragm inspiratory activity in animals, but there is no direct evidence of this reflex in humans. Also, little is known regarding reflex latency or effects of varying time of stimulation during the breathing cycle. We studied effects of UAW negative pressure on inspiratory airflow and respiratory timing in seven tracheostomized infants during quiet sleep with a face mask and syringe used to produce UAW suction without changing lower airway pressure. Suction trials lasted 2-3 s. During UAW suction, mean and peak inspiratory airflow as well as tidal volume was markedly reduced (16-68%) regardless of whether stimulation occurred in inspiration or expiration. Reflex latency was 42 +/- 3 ms. When suction was applied during inspiration or late expiration, the inspiration and the following expiration were shortened. In contrast, suction applied during midexpiration prolonged expiration and tended to prolong inspiration. The changes in flow, tidal volume, and timing indicate a marked inhibitory effect of UAW suction on thoracic inspiratory muscles. Such a reflex mechanism may function in preventing pharyngeal collapse by inspiratory suction pressure.  相似文献   

14.
We previously demonstrated that almitrine, a peripheral chemoreceptor stimulant, increased tidal volume (VT), expired minute ventilation (VE), and respiratory frequency (f) and decreased inspiratory (TI) and expiratory time (TE) in sleeping adult cats. We now hypothesized that almitrine would induce an increase in ventilation in a young animal model. Respiration was studied by the barometric method in 11 unanesthetized New Zealand White rabbit pups between 3 and 6 days of age. Recordings were made in 0.21 FIO2 at base line and after cumulative intraperitoneal infusions of almitrine (2.5, 5.0, and 7.5 mg/kg). The chamber pressure deflection (proportional to VT after appropriate calculation) was computer sampled at 200 Hz. At least 100 breaths for each dose in each animal were analyzed. We found that a 7.5-mg/kg intraperitoneal dose of almitrine increased f to 135 +/- 9% (SE) of base line and decreased TE and TI to 72 +/- 8% and 79 +/- 8% of base line, respectively. Changes in VE, VT/TI, and VT were not significant. Recognizing that apnea is associated with inadequate ventilation and a prolonged TE (failure of the "inspiratory on-switch"), these results, particularly the increase in f and decrease in TE, suggest that almitrine might be useful in treating apnea in preterm infants.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of this study was to elucidate the role of the baroreflex in blood pressure control in sloths, Bradypus variegatus, since these animals show labile levels in this parameter. Unanesthetized cannulated sloths were positioned in an experimental chair and the arterial catheter was coupled to a strain gauge pressure transducer. Blood pressure was monitored before, during and after the administration of phenylephrine (0.0625 to 4 microg/kg) and sodium nitroprusside (0.0625 to 2 microg/kg), bringing about changes in mean blood pressure from +/-30 mmHg in relation to control values. The relation between heart rate changes due to blood pressure variation was estimated by linear regression analysis. The slope was considered the reflex baroreceptor gain. The results (means+/-SD) showed that the reflex baroreceptor gain was -0.3+/-0.1 bpm/mmHg (r=0.88) to phenylephrine and -0.5+/-0.1 bpm/mmHg (r=0.92) to sodium nitroprusside, denoting a reduced reflex baroreceptor gain when compared with other mammals, suggesting that in sloths the baroreceptors are minimally involved in the buffering reflex response to these drugs. These findings suggest that the labile blood pressure could be influenced or be a result of this lowering in the reflex baroreceptor gain.  相似文献   

16.
Arterial baroreceptors are essential for neurocirculatory control, providing rapid hemodynamic feedback to the central nervous system. The pressure-dependent discharge of carotid and aortic baroreceptor afferents has been extensively studied. A common assumption has been that circumferential deformation of the arterial wall is the predominant mechanical force affecting baroreceptor discharge. However, in vivo the arterial tree is under significant longitudinal tension, leading to the hypothesis that axially directed forces may contribute to baroreceptor function. To test this hypothesis, we utilized a combination of finite element modeling methods and an in vitro rat aortic arch preparation. Model formulation utilized traditional analytic constructs available in the literature followed by refinement of model material parameters through direct comparison of computationally and experimentally generated pressure-diameter curves. The numerical simulations strongly indicated a functional role for axial loading within the region of the baroreceptive nerve terminal. This prediction was confirmed through single-fiber recording of baroreceptor nerve discharge under conditions with and without longitudinal tension in the vessel preparation. The recordings (n = 5) demonstrated that longitudinal tension significantly (P < 0.02) lowered both the pressure threshold (P(th), mmHg) for baroreceptor discharge and sensitivity (S(th), Hz/mmHg). The effect was nearly instantaneous and sustained; i.e., under longitudinal tension average P(th) was 84 +/- 3 mmHg and S(th) was 0.71 +/- 0.15 Hz/mmHg, which immediately increased to a P(th) of 94 +/- 4 mmHg and a S(th) of 1.20 +/- 0.32 Hz/mmHg with loss of axial tension. Possible explanations of how an abrupt change in axial loading could result in a synchronized increase in afferent drive of the baroreceptor reflex, and the potentiating effect this could have on neurogenically mediated orthostatic intolerance are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
We assessed changes in respiratory muscle timing in response to hyperpnea and shortened inspiratory and expiratory times caused by chemoreceptor stimuli in six awake dogs. Durations of postinspiratory inspiratory activity of costal and crural diaphragm (PIIA), the delay in diaphragm electromyogram (EMG) after the initiation of inspiratory airflow, postexpiratory expiratory activity of the transversus abdominis (PEEA), and the delay of abdominal expiratory muscle activity after the initiation of expiratory airflow were measured. In control, four out of six dogs showed PIIA [8-10% of expiratory time (TE)]; all showed delay of diaphragm [19% of inspiratory time (TI)], delay of abdominal muscle activation (21% of TE), and PEEA (24% of TI). Hypercapnia decreased PIIA (4-9% of TE), maintained diaphragm delay at near control values (23% of TI), increased PEEA (36% of TI), eliminated delay of abdominal muscle activation (4% of TE), and decreased end-expiratory lung volume (EELV). Hypocapnic hypoxia increased PIIA (24-25% of TE), eliminated diaphragm delay (3% of TI), eliminated PEEA (3% of TI), reduced delay of abdominal muscle activation (14% of TE), and increased EELV. Most of these effects of hypoxic hypocapnia vs. hypercapnia on the within-breath EMG timing parameters corresponded to differences in the magnitude of expiratory muscle activation. These changes exerted significant influences on flow rates and EELV.  相似文献   

18.
Importance of vagal afferents in determining ventilation in newborn rats   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
We studied the effect of acute bilateral vagotomy on ventilation and ventilatory pattern in rats. In 1- to 6-day-old unanesthetized rats, vagotomy resulted in a substantial decrease (38%) in ventilation during air breathing. After vagotomy there was a threefold increase in tidal volume (VT), inspiratory time (TI) doubled, and expiratory time (TE) was six times longer. When studied under isoflurane anesthesia, newborn rats showed decreases in ventilation similar to that observed without anesthesia, whereas anesthetized adult rats had no consistent changes in ventilation. Adult and newborn rats had nearly identical proportionate increases in VT and TI after vagotomy, but TE lengthened to a greater extent in the newborns. Additionally, we demonstrated a significant decrease in ventilation when 100% O2 rather than air was supplied to nonvagotomized unanesthetized newborn rats. Ventilation decreased by 19% after vagotomy under hyperoxic conditions. We conclude that vagal afferent input, probably of pulmonary mechanoreceptor origin, provides positive feedback to respiration in newborn rats and that newborn rats greater than 24 h old also have a degree of peripheral chemoreceptor drive during air breathing.  相似文献   

19.
Adaptation to the reflex effects of sustained changes in lung volume on inspiratory duration (TI), expiratory duration (TE), and the phrenic neurogram was examined. Test inflations in gallamine-paralyzed dogs anesthetized with pentobarbital sodium were made during a 6-min trial while the animal was not ventilated: 2 min at functional residual capacity (FRC), 2 min at elevated airway pressure, and 2 min back at FRC. The dogs were hyperoxygenated and arterial PCO2 was kept constant by an infusion of tris (hydroxymethyl) aminomethane. The maintained inflations produced minimal changes in TI. On return to FRC, TI was prolonged in proportion to the magnitude of the prior inflation. In contrast, inflation produced marked prolongation of TE, which then adapted back toward preinflation values. On return to FRC, TE shortened initially to values below control. This shortening increased with greater prior lung inflations. The times to reestablish steady-state values upon return to FRC differed for TI (14.8 +/- 4.6 s) and TE (33.8 +/- 12.7 s). The magnitude of the phrenic neurogram at a fixed time from onset of inspiration and its slope were unchanged with inflation. These results indicate that respiratory phase durations are influenced not only by pulmonary afferent input within each respiratory cycle but also by prior vagal afferent activity that engages central processes with long, although different, time constants. Afferent input to the slow central process controlling TI is not gated to only one phase of the respiratory cycle.  相似文献   

20.
We studied ventilatory responsiveness to hypoxia and hypercapnia in anesthetized cats before and after exposure to 5 atmospheres absolute O2 for 90-135 min. The acute hyperbaric oxygenation (HBO) was terminated at the onset of slow labored breathing. Tracheal airflow, inspiratory (TI) and expiratory (TE) times, inspiratory tidal volume (VT), end-tidal PO2 and PCO2, and arterial blood pressure were recorded simultaneously before and after HBO. Steady-state ventilation (VI at three arterial PO2 (PaO2) levels of approximately 99, 67, and 47 Torr at a maintained arterial PCO2 (PaCO2, 28 Torr) was measured for the hypoxic response. Ventilation at three steady-state PaCO2 levels of approximately 27, 36, and 46 Torr during hyperoxia (PaO2 450 Torr) gave a hypercapnic response. Both chemical stimuli significantly stimulated VT, breathing frequency, and VI before and after HBO. VT, TI, and TE at a given stimulus were significantly greater after HBO without a significant change in VT/TI. The breathing pattern, however, was abnormal after HBO, often showing inspiratory apneusis. Bilateral vagotomy diminished apneusis and further prolonged TI and TE and increased VT. Thus a part of the respiratory effects of HBO is due to pulmonary mechanoreflex changes.  相似文献   

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