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1.
Similowski, Thomas, Selma Mehiri, Alexandre Duguet,Valérie Attali, Christian Straus, and Jean-Philippe Derenne.Comparison of magnetic and electrical phrenic nerve stimulation inassessment of phrenic nerve conduction time. J. Appl.Physiol. 82(4): 1190-1199, 1997.Cervicalmagnetic stimulation (CMS), a nonvolitional test of diaphragm function,is an easy means for measuring the latency of the diaphragm motorresponse to phrenic nerve stimulation, namely, phrenic nerve conductiontime (PNCT). In this application, CMS has some practical advantagesover electrical stimulation of the phrenic nerve in the neck (ES).Although normal ES-PNCTs have been consistently reported between7 and 8 ms, data are less homogeneous for CMS-PNCTs, with some reportssuggesting lower values. This study systematically compares ES-and CMS-PNCTs for the same subjects. Surface recordings ofdiaphragmatic electromyographic activity were obtained for sevenhealthy volunteers during ES and CMS of varying intensities. Onaverage, ES-PNCTs amounted to 6.41 ± 0.84 ms and were littleinfluenced by stimulation intensity. With CMS, PNCTs were significantlylower (average difference 1.05 ms), showing a marked increase as CMSintensity lessened. ES and CMS values became comparable for a CMSintensity 65% of the maximal possible intensity of 2.5 Tesla. Thesefindings may be the result of phrenic nerve depolarization occurringmore distally than expected with CMS, which may have clinicalimplications regarding the diagnosis and follow-up of phrenic nervelesions.

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2.
The purpose of the study was to compareelectrical stimulation (ES) and cervical magnetic stimulation (CMS) ofthe phrenic nerves for the measurement of the diaphragm compound muscleaction potential (CMAP) and phrenic nerve conduction time. A specially designed esophageal catheter with three pairs of electrodes was used,with control of electrode positioning in 10 normal subjects. Pair A and pairB were close to the diaphragm (pairA lower than pairB); pair C waspositioned 10 cm above the diaphragm to detect the electromyogram fromextradiaphragmatic muscles. Electromyograms were also recorded fromupper and lower chest wall surface electrodes. The shape of the CMAPmeasured with CMS (CMS-CMAP) usually differed from that of the CMAPmeasured with ES (ES-CMAP). Moreover, the latency of theCMS-CMAP from pair B (5.3 ± 0.4 ms) was significantly shorter than that from pairA (7.1 ± 0.7 ms). The amplitude of the CMS-CMAP(1.00 ± 0.15 mV) was much higher than that of ES-CMAP (0.26 ± 0.15 mV) when recorded from pair C.Good-quality CMS-CMAPs could be recorded in some subjects from anelectrode positioned very low in the esophagus. The differences betweenES-CMAP and CMS-CMAP recorded either from esophageal or chest wallelectrodes make CMS unreliable for the measurement of phrenic nerveconduction time.

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3.
Most physiological studies of the human olfactory system haveconcentrated on the cortical level; the olfactory bulbar levelhas been studied rarely. We attempted to stimulate the humanolfactory mucosa by electrical pulse to detect the bulbar potentials.Electrical stimulation (2 mA, 0.5 ms) of the human olfactorymucosa evoked a change in potential recorded from the frontalsector of the head. A negative peak of the evoked potentialthat occurred at 19.4 ms (grand means, n = 5) after stimulationwas the clearest. The highest amplitude of the potential wasrecorded from the frontal sector of the head on the stimulatedside. Our findings were similar to the experimental resultsobtained from the olfactory bulbs of animals. This evoked potentialwas considered to be the human olfactory bulbar potential. Whenthe subjects were stimulated by applying electricity to theolfactory mucosa, no sensation of smell occurred even thoughevoked potentials were recorded. Evoked potentials were recordedonly when the stimulating electrode was located in the olfactorycleft. When the stimulating electrode was outside the olfactorycleft, the stimulation caused pain. The trigeminal nerve seemedto be stimulated by electricity. Olfactory evoked potentialsproduced by the electrical stimulation of the human olfactorymucosa should aid the research on human olfactory physiology,and may be applicable to clinical tests of olfactory dysfunction.Chem. Senses 22: 77–81, 1997.  相似文献   

4.
Attenuation of phrenic motor discharge by phrenic nerve afferents   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Short latency phrenic motor responses to phrenic nerve stimulation were studied in anesthetized, paralyzed cats. Electrical stimulation (0.2 ms, 0.01-10 mA, 2 Hz) of the right C5 phrenic rootlet during inspiration consistently elicited a transient reduction in the phrenic motor discharge. This attenuation occurred bilaterally with an onset latency of 8-12 ms and a duration of 8-30 ms. Section of the ipsilateral C4-C6 dorsal roots abolished the response to stimulation, thereby confirming the involvement of phrenic nerve afferent activity. Stimulation of the left C5 phrenic rootlet or the right thoracic phrenic nerve usually elicited similar inhibitory responses. The difference in onset latency of responses to cervical vs. thoracic phrenic nerve stimulation indicates activation of group III afferents with a peripheral conduction velocity of approximately 10 m/s. A much shorter latency response (5 ms) was evoked ipsilaterally by thoracic phrenic nerve stimulation. Section of either the C5 or C6 dorsal root altered the ipsilateral response so that it resembled the longer latency contralateral response. The low-stimulus threshold and short latency for the ipsilateral response to thoracic phrenic nerve stimulation suggest that it involves larger diameter fibers. Decerebration, decerebellation, and transection of the dorsal columns at C2 do not abolish the inhibitory phrenic-to-phrenic reflex.  相似文献   

5.
Evans, Allison B., Larry W. Tsai, David A. Oelberg, HomayounKazemi, and David M. Systrom. Skeletal muscle ECF pH error signalfor exercise ventilatory control. J. Appl.Physiol. 84(1): 90-96, 1998.An autonomic reflexlinking exercising skeletal muscle metabolism to central ventilatorycontrol is thought to be mediated by neural afferents having freeendings that terminate in the interstitial fluid of muscle. Todetermine whether changes in muscle extracellular fluid pH(pHe) can provide an errorsignal for exercise ventilatory control,pHe was measured duringelectrically induced contraction by31P-magnetic resonancespectroscopy and the chemical shift of a phosphorylated, pH-sensitivemarker that distributes to the extracellular fluid (phenylphosphonicacid). Seven lightly anesthetized rats underwentunilateral continuous 5-Hz sciatic nerve stimulation in an 8.45-Tnuclear magnetic resonance magnet, which resulted in a mixed lacticacidosis and respiratory alkalosis, with no net change in arterial pH.Skeletal muscle intracellular pH fell from 7.30 ± 0.03 units atrest to 6.72 ± 0.05 units at 2.4 min of stimulation and then roseto 7.05 ± 0.01 units (P < 0.05), despite ongoing stimulation and muscle contraction.Despite arterial hypocapnia, pHeshowed an immediate drop from its resting baseline of 7.40 ± 0.01 to 7.16 ± 0.04 units (P < 0.05)and remained acidic throughout the stimulation protocol. During the on-and off-transients for 5-Hz stimulation, changes in the pH gradientbetween intracellular and extracellular compartments suggestedtime-dependent recruitment of sarcolemmal ion-transport mechanisms.pHe of exercising skeletal musclemeets temporal and qualitative criteria necessary for a ventilatorymetaboreflex mediator in a setting where arterial pH doesnot.

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6.
Abdominal muscle fatigue after maximal ventilation in humans   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Kyroussis, Dimitris, Gary H. Mills, Michael I. Polkey,Carl-Hugo Hamnegard, Nicholaos Koulouris, Malcolm Green, and John Moxham. Abdominal muscle fatigue after maximal ventilation inhumans. J. Appl. Physiol. 81(4):1477-1483, 1996.Abdominal muscles are the principal muscles ofactive expiration. To investigate the possibility of abdominal musclelow-frequency fatigue after maximal ventilation in humans, westimulated the nerve roots supplying the abdominal muscles. We used amagnetic stimulator (Magstim 200) powering a 90-mm circular coil andstudied six normal subjects. To assess the optimum level of stimulationand posture, we stimulated at each intervertebral level betweenT7 andL1 in the prone, supine, andseated positions. At T10, we usedincreasing power outputs to assess the pressure-power relationship.Care was taken to avoid muscle potentiation. Twitch gastric pressure(Pga) was recorded with a balloon-tipped catheter. Mean (±SD)baseline twitch Pga measured with the subjects in the prone position atT10 was 23.5 ± 5.4 cmH2O. Within-occasion mean twitchPga coefficient of variation was 4.6 ± 1.1%. Twitch Pga wasmeasured with the subjects in the prone position with stimulation overT10 before and after 2 min ofmaximal isocapnic ventilation (MIV). Twenty minutes after MIV, meantwitch Pga fell by 17 ± 9.1%(P = 0.03) and remained low 90 minafter MIV. We conclude that after maximal ventilation in humans thereis a reduction of twitch Pga and, therefore, of low-frequency fatiguein abdominal muscles.

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7.
The topography of the middle-latency N110 after radial nerve stimulation suggested a generator in SII. To support this hypothesis, we have tried to identify a homologous component in the tibial nerve SEP (somatosensory evoked potential). Evoked potentials following tibial nerve stimulation (motor+sensory threshold) were recorded with 29 electrodes (bandpass 0.5–500 Hz, sampling rate 1000 Hz). For comparison, the median nerve was stimulated at the wrist. Components were identified as peaks in the global field power (GFP). Map series were generated around GFP peaks and amplitudes were measured from electrodes near map maxima. With median nerve stimulation, we recorded a negativity with a maximum in temporal electrode positions and 106±12 ms peak latency (mean±SD), comparable to the N110 following radial nerve stimulation. After tibial nerve stimulation the latency of a component with the same topography was 131±11 ms (N130). Both N110 and N130 were present ipsi- as well as contralaterally. Amplitudes were significantly higher on the contralateral than the ipsilateral scalp for both median (3.1±2.4 μV vs. 1.7±1.6 μV) and tibial nerve (1.9±1.2 μV vs. 0.6+1 μV). The topography of the N130 can be explained by a generator in the vicinity of SII. The latency difference between median and tibial nerve stimulation is related to the longer conduction distance (cf. N20 and P40). The smaller ipsilateral N130 is consistent with the bilateral body representation in SII.  相似文献   

8.
Ray, Chester A., and Keith M. Hume. Neck afferents andmuscle sympathetic activity in humans: implications for the vestibulosympathetic reflex. J. Appl.Physiol. 84(2): 450-453, 1998.We have shownpreviously that head-down neck flexion (HDNF) in humans elicitsincreases in muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA). The purpose ofthis study was to determine the effect of neck muscle afferents onMSNA. We studied this question by measuring MSNA before and after headrotation that would activate neck muscle afferents but not thevestibular system (i.e., no stimulation of the otolith organs orsemicircular canals). After a 3-min baseline period with the head inthe normal erect position, subjects rotated their head to the side(~90°) and maintained this position for 3 min. Head rotation wasperformed by the subjects in both the prone(n = 5) and sitting(n = 6) positions. Head rotation did not elicit changes in MSNA. Average MSNA, expressed asburst frequency and total activity, was 13 ± 1 and 13 ± 1 bursts/min and 146 ± 34 and 132 ± 27 units/min during baselineand head rotation, respectively. There were no significant changes incalf blood flow (2.6 ± 0.3 to 2.5 ± 0.3 ml · 100 ml1 · min1;n = 8) and calf vascular resistance(39 ± 4 to 41 ± 4 units; n = 8). Heart rate (64 ± 3 to 66 ± 3 beats/min;P = 0.058) and mean arterial pressure(90 ± 3 to 93 ± 3; P < 0.05)increased slightly during head rotation. Additional neck flexionstudies were performed with subjects lying on their side(n = 5). MSNA, heart rate, and meanarterial pressure were unchanged during this maneuver, which also doesnot engage the vestibular system. HDNF was tested in 9 of the 13 subjects. MSNA was significantly increased by 79 ± 12% (P < 0.001) during HDNF. Thesefindings indicate that neck afferents activated by horizontal neckrotation or flexion in the absence of significant force development donot elicit changes in MSNA. These findings support the concept thatHDNF increases MSNA by the activation of the vestibular system.

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9.
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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10.
Ray, Chester A., and Kathryn H. Gracey. Augmentation ofexercise-induced muscle sympathetic nerve activity during muscle heating. J. Appl. Physiol. 82(6):1719-1725, 1997.The muscle metabo- and mechanoreflexes have beenshown to increase muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) duringexercise. Group III and IV muscle afferents, which are believed tomediate this response, have been shown to be thermosensitive inanimals. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effect ofmuscle temperature on MSNA responses during exercise. Eleven subjectsperformed ischemic isometric handgrip at 30% of maximal voluntarycontraction to fatigue, followed by 2 min of postexercise muscleischemia (PEMI), with and without local heating of the forearm. Localheating of the forearm increased forearm muscle temperature from 34.4 ± 0.2 to 38.9 ± 0.3°C(P = 0.001). Diastolic andmean arterial pressures were augmented during exercise in the heat.MSNA responses were greater during ischemic handgrip with local heatingcompared with control (no heating) after the first 30 s. MSNA responsesat fatigue were greater during local heating. MSNA increased by 16 ± 2 and 20 ± 2 bursts per 30 s for control and heating,respectively (P = 0.03). Whenexpressed as a percent change in total activity (total burstamplitude), MSNA increased 531 ± 159 and 941 ± 237% forcontrol and heating, respectively (P = 0.001). However, MSNA was not different during PEMI between trials.This finding suggests that the augmentation of MSNA during exercisewith heat was due to the stimulation of mechanically sensitive muscleafferents. These results suggest that heat sensitizes skeletal muscleafferents during muscle contraction in humans and may play a role inthe regulation of MSNA during exercise.

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11.
Lin, Y. S., and Y. R. Kou. Reflex apneic responseevoked by laryngeal exposure to wood smoke in rats: neural and chemical mechanisms. J. Appl. Physiol. 83(3):723-730, 1997.We investigated the neural and chemical mechanismscontributing to the immediate ventilatory responses to laryngealexposure to wood smoke in anesthetized Sprague-Dawley rats. Fivemilliliters of wood smoke were delivered into a functionally isolatedlarynx at a constant flow rate of 1.4 ml/s while the animals breathedspontaneously. Within 1 s after exposure, laryngeal wood smokeconsistently triggered an apnea in each of the 42 rats tested. Theapneic duration reached 1,636.4 ± 105.4 (SE) % (n = 42) of the baseline expiratoryduration. This apneic response was not affected by denervation ofrecurrent laryngeal nerves (n = 6) orby removal of smoke particulates (n = 14), but it was totally eliminated by topical application of ananesthetic (n = 8; lidocainehydrochloride, 8%) to the laryngeal mucosa or by sectioning of thesuperior laryngeal nerves (n = 42).Furthermore, laryngeal application of a hydroxyl radical scavenger(dimethylthiourea; 500 mg/ml; n = 8)greatly diminished or abolished the smoke-induced apneic response, butit did not affect the apneic response evoked by laryngeal exposure toair saturated with 6% ammonia. These results suggest that theimmediate apneic response to laryngeal wood smoke is a reflex resulting from the stimulation of the superior laryngeal afferents by the gasphase of wood smoke and that the stimulation is mediated through ahydroxyl radical mechanism.

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12.
The present study compared the cerebral processing of non-painful and painful cutaneous CO2 laser stimulation and intramuscular electrical stimulation in 11 normal subjects. The overall wave form morphology of the long-latency evoked potentials (EPs) at the central vertex (Cz) was identical and surface topographic mappings of the 21-channel recordings showed similar distributions, suggesting involvement of common neural generators. However, the EPs caused by intramuscular stimulation differed from cutaneous stimulation in several distinct ways. First, the latency of the major positive and negative components were significantly shorter with intramuscular stimulation (N 128–145 ms; P 274–298 ms) compared to cutaneous stimulation (N 235–286 ms; P 371–383 ms) (P<0.001). Second, the peak-to-peak amplitude and root-mean-square values of intramuscular EPs recorded at Cz showed a ceiling effect in the painful range, whereas the laser EPs continued to increase in this range. Third, painful intramuscular, but not non-painful, stimulation caused a frontal activity which not was observed with cutaneous laser stimulation at any intensity. Conduction velocity measurements indicated activation of nociceptive A-delta afferents with cutaneous laser stimulation (10.2±0.2 m/s) and activation of a mixed nerve fiber population with intramuscular electrical stimulation (65.8±25.8 m/s). Differences between laser and intramuscular EPs may be due to different types and origins of activated afferent fibers. Laser EPs can be used specifically to assess cutaneous A-delta fiber function, whereas intramuscular EPs reflect the cerebral processing of a mixed afferent input from muscle tissue.  相似文献   

13.
Allan, Douglas W., and John J. Greer. Pathogenesis ofnitrofen-induced congenital diaphragmatic hernia in fetal rats. J. Appl. Physiol. 83(2): 338-347, 1997.Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is a developmental anomalycharacterized by the malformation of the diaphragm and impaired lungdevelopment. In the present study, we tested several hypothesesregarding the pathogenesis of CDH, including those suggesting that theprimary defect is due to abnormal 1)lung development, 2) phrenic nerveformation, 3) developmentalprocesses underlying diaphragmatic myotube formation, 4) pleuroperitoneal canal closure,or 5) formation of the primordial diaphragm within the pleuroperitoneal fold. The2,4-dichloro-phenyl-p-nitrophenyl ether (nitrofen)-induced CDH rat model was used for thisstudy. The following parameters were compared between normal andherniated fetal rats at various stages of development:1) weight, protein, and DNA contentof lungs; 2) phrenic nerve diameter,axonal number, and motoneuron distribution;3) formation of the phrenic nerve intramuscular branching pattern and diaphragmatic myotube formation; and 4) formation of the precursor ofthe diaphragmatic musculature, the pleuroperitoneal fold. Wedemonstrated that previously proposed theories regarding the primaryrole of the lung, phrenic nerve, myotube formation, and the closure ofpleuroperitoneal canal in the pathogenesis of CDH are incorrect.Rather, the primary defect associated with CDH, at least in thenitrofen rat model, occurs at the earliest stage of diaphragmdevelopment, the formation of the pleuroperitoneal fold.

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14.
Mateika, J. H., and R. F. Fregosi. Long-termfacilitation of upper airway muscle activities in vagotomized andvagally intact cats. J. Appl. Physiol.82(2): 419-425, 1997.The primary purpose of the presentinvestigation was to determine whether long-term facilitation (LTF) ofupper airway muscle activities occurs in vagotomized and vagally intactcats. Tidal volume and diaphragm, genioglossus, and nasal dilatormuscle activities were recorded before, during, and after one carotidsinus nerve was stimulated five times with 2-min trains of constantcurrent. Sixty minutes after stimulation, nasal dilator andgenioglossus muscle activities were significantly greater than controlin the vagotomized cats but not in the vagally intact cats. Tidalvolume recorded from the vagotomized and vagally intact cats wassignificantly greater than control during the poststimulation period.In contrast, diaphragm activities were not significantly elevated inthe poststimulation period in either group of animals. We conclude that1) LTF of genioglossus and nasaldilator muscle activities can be evoked in vagotomized cats;2) vagal mechanisms inhibit LTF inupper airway muscles; and 3) LTF canbe evoked in accessory inspiratory muscles because LTF of inspiredtidal volume was greater than LTF of diaphragm activity.

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15.
Sahin, Mesut, Musa A. Haxhiu, Dominique M. Durand, andIsmail A. Dreshaj. Spiral nerve cuff electrode for recordings ofrespiratory output. J. Appl. Physiol.83(1): 317-322, 1997.The feasibility of using the spiral nervecuff electrode design for recordings of respiratory output from thehypoglossal (HG) and phrenic nerves is demonstrated in anesthetized,paralyzed, and artificially ventilated cats. Raw neural discharges ofthe HG nerve were analyzed in terms of signal-to-noise ratios andfrequency spectra. The rectified and integrated moving average activity of the HG nerve had a peak value of 1.74 ± 0.21 µV and a baseline value of 0.72 ± 0.11 µV at elevated respiratory drive induced byincreases in CO2 or oxygendeprivation when recorded with 10-mm-long cuffs. The frequency contentof the HG electroneurogram extended from several hundred hertz to 6 kHz. Spiral nerve cuff recordings without desheathing of the nerveprovided large enough signal-to-noise ratios that allowed them to beused as a measure of respiratory output and had much wider frequencybandwidths than the hook electrode preparations. A major advantage ofthe cuff electrode over the hook electrode was its mechanicalstability, which significantly improved the reproducibility of therecordings both in terms of signal amplitudes and frequency contents.

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16.
Respiratoryresponse to selective activation of vagal afferents in the peripheralairways was investigated in anesthetized, open-chest, and artificiallyventilated rabbits. Phrenic activity was used as an index of centralrespiratory drive before and after injection of hypertonic saline(8.1%, 0.1 ml) into the periphery of the lung to stimulate theafferents. The amplitude of "integrated" phrenic activity andphrenic burst rate increased by 19 ± 3.4 and 53.7 ± 12.7%(n = 23;P < 0.001),respectively. The response peaked at 5.5 ± 1.6 s andreturned to the baseline at 7 min (median) after the injection. Themagnitude of the response was positively related to the concentrationof injected NaCl. The response could not be elicited by injection ofnormal saline and was abolished by vagotomy. Because artificialventilation caused phrenic activity to be entrained with theventilator, respiratory drive was further assessed after the ventilatorwas stopped. Again, neural hyperpnea and tachypnea were observed.Because activation of a small fraction of the pulmonary peripheralafferents resulted in vigorous stimulation of respiratory drive, wespeculate that initiation of this reflex may contribute to hyperpneaand tachypnea under both physiological and pathophysiologicalconditions.

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17.
The projections of phrenic nerve afferents to neurons in the dorsal (DRG) and ventral (VRG) respiratory group were studied in anesthetized, paralyzed, and vagotomized cats. Extracellular recordings of neuronal responses to vagal nerve and cervical phrenic nerve stimulation (CPNS) indicated that about one-fourth of the DRG respiratory-modulated neurons were excited by phrenic nerve afferents with an onset latency of approximately 20 ms. In addition, non-respiratory-modulated neurons within the DRG were recruited by CPNS. Although some convergence of vagal and phrenic afferent input was observed, most neurons were affected by only one type of afferent. In contrast to the DRG, only 3 out of 28 VRG respiratory-modulated neurons responded to CPNS. A second study determined that most of these neuronal responses were due to activation of diaphragmatic afferents since 90% of the DRG units activated by CPNS were also excited at a longer latency by thoracic phrenic nerve stimulation. The difference in onset latency of neuronal excitation indicates an afferent peripheral conduction velocity of about 10 m/s, which suggests that they are predominately small myelinated fibers (group III) making paucisynaptic connections with DRG neurons. Decerebration, decerebellation, and bilateral transection of the dorsal columns at C2 do not abolish the neuronal responses to cervical PNS.  相似文献   

18.
Rapid-rate paired associative stimulation (rPAS) involves repeat pairing of peripheral nerve stimulation and Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) pulses at a 5 Hz frequency. RPAS over primary motor cortex (M1) operates with spike-timing dependent plasticity such that increases in corticospinal excitability occur when the nerve and TMS pulse temporally coincide in cortex. The present study investigates the effects of rPAS over primary somatosensory cortex (SI) which has not been performed to date. In a series of experiments, rPAS was delivered over SI and M1 at varying timing intervals between the nerve and TMS pulse based on the latency of the N20 somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) component within each participant (intervals for SI-rPAS: N20, N20-2.5 ms, N20 + 2.5 ms, intervals for M1-rPAS: N20, N20+5 ms). Changes in SI physiology were measured via SEPs (N20, P25, N20-P25) and SEP paired-pulse inhibition, and changes in M1 physiology were measured with motor evoked potentials and short-latency afferent inhibition. Measures were obtained before rPAS and at 5, 25 and 45 minutes following stimulation. Results indicate that paired-pulse inhibition and short-latency afferent inhibition were reduced only when the SI-rPAS nerve-TMS timing interval was set to N20-2.5 ms. SI-rPAS over SI also led to remote effects on motor physiology over a wider range of nerve-TMS intervals (N20-2.5 ms – N20+2.5 ms) during which motor evoked potentials were increased. M1-rPAS increased motor evoked potentials and reduced short-latency afferent inhibition as previously reported. These data provide evidence that, similar to M1, rPAS over SI is spike-timing dependent and is capable of exerting changes in SI and M1 physiology.  相似文献   

19.
Chen, Zibin, and Frederic L. Eldridge. Inputs fromupper airway affect firing of respiratory-associated midbrain neurons. J. Appl. Physiol. 83(1): 196-203, 1997.In 16 decerebrated unanesthetized cats, we studied effects ofneural inputs from upper airway on firing of 62 mesencephalic neuronsthat also developed respiratory-associated (RA) rhythmic firing whenrespiratory drive was high [Z. Chen, F. L. Eldridge, and P.G.Wagner. J. Physiol. (Lond.) 437:305-325, 1991] and on firing of 16 neurons that did notdevelop the rhythmic firing (non-RA neurons). Activity in RA neuronsincreased after mechanical expansion of pharynx (45% of those tested)or larynx (68%) and after stimulation of glossopharyngeal (50%) orsuperior laryngeal nerves (77%). The increased neuronal firingoccurred despite decreases or abolition of respiratory activity(expressed in phrenic nerve). Neuronal firing also increased aftermechanical stimulation of nasal mucosa (66%) or by jetsof air directed into the nares (48%) and after lightbrushing of nasal skin (~40%). Most stimuli led to decreased firingin a smaller number of neurons, and some neurons showed no response.None of the non-RA neurons developed an increase of firing after any ofthe stimuli, although one had decreased firing after stimulation of thesuperior laryngeal nerve. We conclude that inputs from the upper airwayand nasal skin have independent modulatory effects on the samemesencephalic neurons that are stimulated by ascending rhythmic RAinput from the medulla. These findings may have relevance to generationof the sensation of dyspnea.

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20.
Responses of group III and IV muscle afferents to dynamic exercise   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Adreani, Christine M., Janeen M. Hill, and Marc P. Kaufman.Responses of group III and IV muscle afferents to dynamic exercise. J. Appl. Physiol. 82(6):1811-1817, 1997.Tetanic contraction of hindlimb skeletal muscle,induced by electrical stimulation of either ventral roots or peripheralnerves, is well known to activate group III and IV afferents.Nevertheless, the effect of dynamic exercise on the discharge of thesethin fiber afferents is unknown. To shed some light on this question,we recorded in decerebrate cats the discharge of 24 group III and 10 group IV afferents while the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR) wasstimulated electrically. Each of the 34 afferents had their receptivefields in the triceps surae muscles. Stimulation of the MLR for 1 min caused the triceps surae muscles to contract rhythmically, an effectinduced by an -motoneuron discharge pattern and recruitment orderalmost identical to that occurring during dynamic exercise. Eighteen ofthe 24 group III and 8 of the 10 group IV muscle afferents werestimulated by MLR stimulation. The oxygen consumption of thedynamically exercising triceps surae muscles was increased by 2.5-foldover their resting levels. We conclude that low levels of dynamicexercise stimulate group III and IV muscle afferents.

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