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1.
Hypoxia inhibits abdominal expiratory nerve activity   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Our purpose was to examine the influence of steady-state changes in chemical stimuli, as well as discrete peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation, on abdominal expiratory motor activity. In decerebrate, paralyzed, vagotomized, and ventilated cats that had bilateral pneumothoraces, we recorded efferent activity from a phrenic nerve and from an abdominal nerve (cranial iliohypogastric nerve, L1). All cats showed phasic expiratory abdominal nerve discharge at normocapnia [end-tidal PCO2 38 +/- 2 Torr], but small doses (2-6 mg/kg) of pentobarbital sodium markedly depressed this activity. Hyperoxic hypercapnia consistently enhanced abdominal expiratory activity and shortened the burst duration. Isocapnic hypoxia caused inhibition of abdominal nerve discharge in 11 of 13 cats. Carotid sinus nerve denervation (3 cats) exacerbated the hypoxic depression of abdominal nerve activity and depressed phrenic motor output. Stimulation of peripheral chemoreceptors with NaCN increased abdominal nerve discharge in 7 of 10 cats, although 2 cats exhibited marked inhibition. Four cats with intact neuraxis, but anesthetized with ketamine, yielded qualitatively similar results. We conclude that when cats are subjected to steady-state chemical stimuli in isolation (no interference from proprioceptive inputs), hypercapnia potentiates, but hypoxia attenuates, abdominal expiratory nerve activity. Mechanisms to explain the selective inhibition of expiratory motor activity by hypoxia are proposed, and physiological implications are discussed.  相似文献   

2.
We examined the effects of progressive hypercapnia and hypoxia on the efferent neural activity in a whole abdominal expiratory nerve (medial branch of the cranial iliohypogastric nerve (L1) in anesthetized, paralyzed dogs. To eliminate effects of phasic lung and chest-wall movements on expiratory activity, studies were performed in the absence of breathing movements. Progressive hyperoxic hypercapnia and isocapnic hypoxia were produced in the paralyzed animals by allowing 3-5 min of apnea to follow mechanical ventilation with 100% O2 or 35% O2 in N2, respectively; during hypoxia, isocapnia was maintained by intravenous infusion of tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane buffer at a predetermined rate. To quantify abdominal expiratory activity, mean abdominal nerve activity in a nerve burst was computed by integrating the abdominal neurogram and dividing by the duration of the nerve burst. Hypercapnia and hypoxia both increased mean abdominal nerve activity and decreased expiratory duration. In contrast to the ramplike phrenic neurogram, the abdominal neurogram consisted of three phases: an initial rising phase, a plateau phase in which abdominal nerve activity was approximately constant, and a terminal declining phase in which the activity returned to the base-line level. The height of this plateau phase and the rates of rise and decline of abdominal nerve activity all increased with increasing hypercapnia and hypoxia. We conclude that, with proprioceptive inputs constant, both hypercapnia and hypoxia are excitatory to abdominal expiratory neural activity.  相似文献   

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Persistence of inspiratory muscle activity during the early phase of expiratory airflow slows the rate of lung deflation, whereas heightened expiratory muscle activity produces the opposite effect. To examine the influence of increased chemoreceptor drive and the role of vagal afferent activity on these processes, the effects of progressive hypercapnia were evaluated in 12 anesthetized tracheotomized dogs before and after vagotomy. Postinspiratory activity of inspiratory muscles (PIIA) and the activity of expiratory muscles were studied. During resting breathing, the duration of PIIA correlated with the duration of inspiration but not with expiration. Parasternal intercostal PIIA was directly related to that of the diaphragm. Based on their PIIA, dogs could be divided into two groups: one with prolonged PIIA (mean 0.57 s) and the other with brief PIIA (mean 0.16 s). Hypercapnia caused progressive shortening of the PIIA in the dogs with prolonged PIIA during resting breathing. The electrical activity of the external oblique and internal intercostal muscles increased gradually during CO2 rebreathing in all dogs both pre- and postvagotomy. After vagotomy, abdominal activity continued to increase with hypercapnia but was less at all levels of PCO2. The internal intercostal response to hypercapnia was not affected by vagotomy. The combination of shorter PIIA and augmented expiratory activity with hypercapnia might, in addition to changes in lung recoil pressure and airway resistance, hasten exhalation.  相似文献   

5.
To determinewhether nonchemical inhibition of respiratory activity occurs duringinspiratory pressure support (IPS) ventilation (IPSV), respiratorymotor output (in 9 subjects), obtained by calculatingtransdiaphragmatic pressure-time products, and central respiratoryoutput (in 5 subjects), obtained by integrating the electromyographicactivity of the diaphragm (EMGdi) during mechanical inspiratory time,EMGdi per minute, and electrical inspiratory time, asdetermined from onset to peak EMGdi, were compared during spontaneous ventilation (control) and IPSV with(IPS+CO2) and without (IPS)correction of hypocapnia. Both IPS andIPS+CO2 induced significantdecreases in transdiaphragmatic pressure-time products (46 ± 31 and53 ± 23%, respectively), EMGdi during mechanical inspiratory time(49 ± 12 and 57 ± 14%, respectively), EMGdi per minute (65 ± 22 and 69 ± 15%, respectively), andelectrical inspiratory time (73 ± 8 and 65 ± 6%,respectively). Because correction of hypocapnia failed to eliminate themarked inhibition of both respiratory and central motor output seenwith IPS, we conclude that nonchemical inhibition of respiratoryactivity occurs during IPSV.

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6.
We investigated the effect of acute and sustained inspiratory resistive loading (IRL) on the activity of expiratory abdominal muscles (EMGab) and the diaphragm (EMGdi) and on ventilation during wakefulness and non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep in healthy subjects. EMGdi and EMGab were measured with esophageal and transcutaneous electrodes, respectively. During wakefulness, EMGdi increased in response to acute loading (18 cmH2O.l-1.s) (+23%); this was accompanied by preservation of tidal volume (VT) and minute ventilation (VE). During NREM sleep, no augmentation was noted in EMGdi or EMGab. Inspiratory time (TI) was prolonged (+5%), but this was not sufficient to prevent a decrease in both VT and VE (-21 and -20%, respectively). During sustained loading (12 cmH2O.l-1 s) in NREM sleep, control breaths (C) were compared with the steady-state loaded breaths (SS) defined by breaths 41-50. Steady-state IRL was associated with augmentation of EMGdi (12%) and EMGab (50%). VT returned to control levels, expiratory time shortened, and breathing frequency increased. The net result was the increase in VE above control levels (+5%, P less than 0.01). No change was noted in end-tidal CO2 or O2. We concluded that 1) wakefulness is a prerequisite for immediate load compensation (in its absence, TI prolongation is the only compensatory response) and 2) during sustained IRL, the augmentation of EMGdi and EMGab can lead to complete ventilatory recovery without measurable changes in chemical stimuli.  相似文献   

7.
In a previous study in unanesthetized goats, we demonstrated that continuous naloxone (NLX) administration during inspiratory flow-resistive loading (IRL) significantly increased tidal volume (VT) but not diaphragm electromyogram (EMGdi). End-expiratory gastric pressure did increase with NLX, implying that increased abdominal muscle activity may have accounted for the NLX effect. In the current study we directly tested the hypothesis that endogenous opioid elaboration depresses the abdominal muscle response to a continuous inspiratory flow-resistive load. In seven unanesthetized goats, VT, arterial blood gases, EMGdi, and EMG activity of external oblique (EMGeo), transversus abdominis (EMGta), and external intercostal (EMGei) muscles were monitored. IRL (50 cmH2O.l-1.s) was continued for 3 h, after which NLX (0.1 mg/kg) or saline was given. Our results showed that VT decreased from 323 +/- 32 (SE) ml at baseline to 260 +/- 16 ml 5 min after the load was imposed (P less than 0.05) and further decreased to 229 +/- 18 and 217 +/- 15 ml by 120 and 180 min, respectively (180 vs. 5 min, P less than 0.05). EMGdi increased from 62 +/- 5 to 83 +/- 4% max at 5 min (P less than 0.05) but was unchanged thereafter. In contrast, for this same time period EMGeo increased from 35 +/- 5 to 58 +/- 11% max but decreased from 67 +/- 11% max at 120 min to 37 +/- 5% max at 180 min (P less than 0.05). NLX administration resulted in significant increases in EMGeo (91% above 180-min value). In contrast, EMGdi increased minimally after NLX (15% above 180-min value).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

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Recently, a vagally mediated excitatory lung reflex (ELR) causing neural hyperpnea and tachypnea was identified. Because ventilation is regulated through both inspiratory and expiratory processes, we investigated the effects of the ELR on these two processes simultaneously. In anesthetized, open-chest, and artificially ventilated rabbits, we recorded phrenic nerve activity and abdominal muscle activity to assess the breathing pattern when the ELR was evoked by directly injecting hypertonic saline (8.1%, 0.1 ml) into lung parenchyma. Activation of the ELR stimulated inspiratory activity, which was exhibited by increasing amplitude, burst rate, and duty cycle of the phrenic activity (by 22 +/- 4, 33 +/- 9, and 57 +/- 11%, respectively; n = 13; P < 0.001), but suppressed expiratory muscle activity. The expiratory muscle became silent in most cases. On average, the amplitude of expiratory muscle activity decreased by 88 +/- 5% (P < 0.002). The suppression reached the peak at 6.9 +/- 1 s and lasted for 200 s (median). Injection of H(2)O(2) into the lung parenchyma produced similar responses. By suppressing expiration, the ELR produces a shift in the workload from expiratory muscle to inspiratory muscle. Therefore, we conclude that the ELR may contribute to inspiratory muscle fatigue, not only by directly increasing the inspiratory activity but also by suppressing expiratory activity.  相似文献   

10.
The central effects of tachykinins (substance P, neurokinin A, and neurokinin B) on the distribution of the motor activity to rib cage and abdominal expiratory muscles were studied in anesthetized tracheotomized spontaneously breathing dogs and cats. Intracisternal application of substance P (11 dogs) in doses of 10(-5) to 10(-4) M caused diaphragm electrical activity to change insignificantly from 19.3 +/- 1.9 to 24.8 +/- 3.2 units (P greater than 0.05), produced a moderate increase of triangularis sterni activity from 12.6 +/- 2.2 to 19.2 +/- 2.2 units (P less than 0.05), and stimulated a large increase of transversus abdominis activity from 9.4 +/- 2.7 to 28.5 +/- 2.6 units (P less than 0.01). Comparable effects were seen with similar doses of neurokinin A (8 dogs) and neurokinin B (3 dogs) administered intracisternally. Local application of substance P to the ventral medullary surface (5 dogs and 4 cats) also caused expiratory muscle activity to increase more than diaphragm activity, and in addition transversus abdominis activity increased to a larger extent than triangularis sterni activity. Furthermore, administration of the substance P antagonist [D-Pro2,D-Trp7,9]-SP to the ventral medullary surface decreased respiratory motor output, with expiratory muscles activity being attenuated to a greater extent than diaphragm activity. Application of neurotensin and N-methyl-D-asparate to the ventral surface of the medulla produced responses similar to those observed as a result of central administration of tachykinin peptides. The results suggest that 1) mammalian tachykinins are involved in the regulation of thoracic and abdominal expiratory muscle activity, 2) these muscles manifest substantial differences in their electrical responses to excitatory neuropeptides acting centrally, and 3) inputs from modulatory neurons located in this vicinity of the ventral medullary surface seem to be distributed unevenly to different expiratory premotor and/or motoneurons.  相似文献   

11.
We hypothesized that contractions of the expiratory muscles carried out to the point of task failure would cause an increase in muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA). We measured MSNA directly in six healthy men during resisted expiration (60% maximal expiratory pressure) leading to task failure with long [breathing frequency (f(b)) = 15 breaths/min; expiratory time (TE)/total respiratory cycle duration (TT) = 0.7] and short (f(b) = 30 breaths/min; TE/TT = 0.4) TE. Both of these types of expiratory muscle contractions elicited time-dependent increases in MSNA burst frequency that averaged +139 and +239%, respectively, above baseline at end exercise. The increased MSNA coincided with increases in mean arterial pressure (MAP) for both the long-TE (+28 +/- 6 mmHg) and short-TE (+22 +/- 14 mmHg) trials. Neither MSNA nor MAP changed when the breathing patterns and increased tidal volume of the task failure trials were mimicked without resistance or task failure. Furthermore, very high levels of expiratory motor output (95% maximal expiratory pressure; f(b) = 12 breaths/min; TE/TT = 0.35) and high rates of expiratory flow and expiratory muscle shortening without task failure (no resistance; f(b) = 45 breaths/min; TE/TT = 0.4; tidal volume = 1.9 x eupnea) had no effect on MSNA or MAP. Within-breath analysis of the short-expiration trials showed augmented MSNA at the onset of and throughout expiration that was consistent with an influence of high levels of central expiratory motor output. Thus high-intensity contractions of expiratory muscles to the point of task failure caused a time-dependent sympathoexcitation; these effects on MSNA were similar in their time dependency to those caused by high-intensity rhythmic contractions of the diaphragm and forearm muscles taken to the point of task failure. The evidence suggests that these effects are mediated primarily via a muscle metaboreflex with a minor, variable contribution from augmented central expiratory motor output.  相似文献   

12.
Central Nervous System modulates the motor activities of all trunk muscles to concurrently regulate the intra-abdominal and intra-thoracic pressures. The study aims to evaluate the effect of inspiratory and expiratory loads on abdominal muscle activity during breathing in healthy subjects. Twenty-three higher education students (21.09 ± 1.56 years; 8 males) breathed at a same rhythm (inspiration: two seconds; expiration: four seconds) without load and with 10% of the maximal inspiratory or expiratory pressures, in standing. Surface electromyography was performed to assess the activation intensity of rectus abdominis, external oblique and transversus abdominis/internal oblique muscles, during inspiration and expiration. During inspiration, transversus abdominis/internal oblique activation intensity was significantly lower with inspiratory load when compared to without load (p = 0.009) and expiratory load (p = 0.002). During expiration, the activation intensity of all abdominal muscles was significantly higher with expiratory load when compared to without load (p < 0.05). The activation intensity of external oblique (p = 0.036) and transversus abdominis/internal oblique (p = 0.022) was significantly higher with inspiratory load when compared to without load. Transversus abdominis/internal oblique activation intensity was significantly higher with expiratory load when compared to inspiratory load (p < 0.001).Transversus abdominis/internal oblique seems to be the most relevant muscle to modulate the intra-abdominal pressure for the breathing mechanics.  相似文献   

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The relative occurrence of slow-twitch (ST) and fast-twitch (FTa and FTb) fibers, fiber size, and capillary supply in internal (INT) and external intercostal muscles (EXT), the costal diaphragm (DIA), and vastus lateralis muscle (VAS) was examined post-mortem in eight healthy males. The relative occurrence of ST fibers in INT [64 +/- 3% (SE)] and EXT (62 +/- 3%) was similar but higher than in DIA (49 +/- 3%) and VAS (40 +/- 6%; P less than 0.05). The occurrence of FTa fibers in expiratory INT (35 +/- 3%) was higher than in inspiratory INT and EXT (17 +/- 1%; P less than 0.05) but similar to DIA (28 +/- 6%) and VAS (32 +/- 2%). Accordingly, expiratory INT had fewer FTb fibers (1 +/- 1%) than the others (P less than 0.05). Expiratory INT had a 60% larger fiber area than inspiratory INT and EXT and DIA (P less than 0.05), but the area was similar to that of VAS. The number of capillaries per fiber was higher in expiratory INT (2.3 +/- 0.1) than in inspiratory INT and EXT (1.6 +/- 0.1), DIA (1.9 +/- 0.1), and VAS (1.8 +/- 0.2; P less than 0.05). The results suggest that the occurrence of many large capillary-rich FTa fibers in expiratory INT is bound to function (expiratory vs. inspiratory) rather than to anatomy (INT vs. EXT).  相似文献   

15.
Six healthy male adults were studied at five levels of suprathreshold added resistance (delta R) applied thrice to either inspiration (I) or expiration (E) in a random sequence. Subjects squeezed on isometric handgrip dynamometer to express the perceived magnitude of the load. Peak mouth pressure (Pm), flow, grip (G), and delta R were analyzed to derive the exponent for Steven's power law. We observed that the slope for log G vs. log delta R was significantly greater for I loads than for E loads (P less than 0.05), but the intercepts for E loads were significantly elevated. However, the slopes and intercepts for log G vs. log Pm during the same I and E loads were not significantly different. When subjects were instructed to target I or E flow to a preset level, we observed no difference between the slopes and intercepts for log G vs. log delta R during I and E loading. These results suggest that 1) the sensory information utilized in judging the magnitude of added resistance is more likely related to the force generated by the respiratory muscles (Pm) rather than delta R per se; and 2) similar muscle receptors and neural processing systems are utilized in the estimation of added loads involving either inspiratory or expiratory muscle groups.  相似文献   

16.
To investigate the effect of lung inflations on the high-frequency synchrony (70-122 Hz) observed in the inspiratory activity of respiratory motor nerves of decerebrate cats, I applied a step increase in lung inflation pressure at fixed delays into the inspiratory phase and computed power spectra of phrenic neurograms before and during inflation. In 25 decerebrate paralyzed cats the frequency of the high spectral peak was 92.3 +/- 11.1 Hz before and 105.3 +/- 12.1 Hz during the step in inflation pressure, shifting upward by 13.0 +/- 6.0 Hz. For 8 of the 25 cats, the recurrent laryngeal and phrenic neurograms were recorded simultaneously. The high spectral peak was present during inspiration in the recurrent laryngeal power spectra and coherent with the high peak in the phrenic power spectra. In response to lung inflation, the high peak disappeared from the power spectra of the recurrent laryngeal nerve as the inspiratory activity was inhibited; a shift upward in frequency was not detectable. Comparing inspiratory times (TI, based on the phrenic neurograms) for breaths with no lung inflations to those for breaths with lung inflations, I found that lung inflations early in inspiration caused a decrease in TI, lung inflations at intermediates times had no effect on TI, and lung inflations late in inspiration caused an increase in TI. Despite lung inflation decreasing, not affecting, or increasing inspiratory duration and amplitude of the phrenic neurogram, lung inflation always caused a shift upward in the high-frequency peak of the phrenic power density. The fact that lung inflation, a powerful respiratory stimulus, affected the frequency of the high peak in a consistent manner suggests that the high-frequency synchrony is an important and robust feature of the central respiratory pattern generator.  相似文献   

17.
To characterize respiratory interphase relationships in dogs, inspiratory duration (TI) or expiratory duration (TE) was systematically altered by electrical activation of vagal afferents, and the effect on subsequent TE or TI values was measured from the phrenic discharge. A linear TI-subsequent TE relationship was found. Following a vagally mediated prolongation of TE, 1) TI was prolonged, and the TE-subsequent TI relationship was curvilinear, 2) the threshold for inspiratory termination by phasic vagal inputs was increased, 3) the amplitude of the time course of the phrenic discharge was reduced so that the peak discharge reached the same level at inspiratory termination independent of TI, 4) the effect on TI prolongation persisted for several breaths whereas the effect was minimal on subsequent TE values, and 5) for tonic inputs the direct shortening of TI was nearly offset by the indirect lengthening of TI. These studies suggest the existence of slow central mechanisms that provide adaptation to elevated levels of vagal input in the control of TI. These mechanisms may also be responsible for the interphase timing relationships.  相似文献   

18.
Pan BX  Wu ZH 《生理学报》2001,53(2):89-92
在新生大鼠延髓脑片上同步记录舌下神经根和双相呼气神经元/吸气神经元单位的放电活动,并在灌流的改良Kredbs液中先后加以非NMDA受体的激动剂KA和拮抗剂DNQX,观察对神经元单位放电的影响,以进一步探讨非NMDA受体在对双相呼气神经元之间交互兴奋和吸气神经元兴奋性突触输入中的作用,结果表明,使用非NMDA受体激动剂KA以后,双相呼气神经元的放电频率和蜂频率都明显增大,吸气神经元中期放电的频率和非NMDA受体激动剂KA以后,双相呼气神经元的放电频率和峰频率都明显增大,吸气神经元中期放电的频率和峰频率也显著增大,而早期和晚期放电的频率无明显改变,用相应拮抗剂以后,上述效应明显被抑制,结果提示,非NMDA受体参与了双相呼气神经元之间的交互兴奋作用,并且也介导了吸气神经元的兴奋性突触输入/  相似文献   

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Background  

Maximum pressures developed by the respiratory muscles can indicate the health of the respiratory system, help to determine maximum respiratory flow rates, and contribute to respiratory power development. Past measurements of maximum pressures have been found to be inadequate for inclusion in some exercise models involving respiration.  相似文献   

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