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1.
Receptors responding to transmural pressure, airflow, and contraction of laryngeal muscles have been previously identified in the larynx. To assess the relative contribution of these three types of receptors to the reflex changes in breathing pattern and upper airway patency, we studied diaphragmatic (DIA) and posterior cricoarytenoid muscle (PCA) activity in anesthetized dogs during spontaneous breathing and occluded efforts with and without bypassing the larynx. Inspiratory duration (TI) was longer, mean inspiratory slope (peak DIA/TI) was lower, and PCA activity was greater with upper airway occlusion than with tracheal occlusion (larynx bypassed). Bilateral section of the superior laryngeal nerves eliminated these differences. When respiratory airflow was diverted from the tracheostomy to the upper airway the only change attributable to laryngeal afferents was an increase in PCA activity. These results confirm the importance of the superior laryngeal nerves in the regulation of breathing pattern and upper airway patency and suggest a prevalent role for laryngeal negative pressure receptors.  相似文献   

2.
During resting breathing, expiration is characterized by the narrowing of the vocal folds which, by increasing the expiratory resistance, raises mean lung volume and airway pressure. This is even more pronounced in the neonatal period, during which expirations with short complete airway closure are commonly occurring. We asked to which extent differences in expiratory flow pattern may modify the inspiratory impedance of the respiratory system. To this aim, newborn puppies, piglets, and adult rats were anesthetized, paralyzed, and ventilated with different expiratory patterns, (a) no expiratory load, (b) expiratory resistive load, and (c) end-inspiratory pause. The stroke volume of the ventilator and inspiratory and expiratory times were maintained constant, and the loads were adjusted in such a way that inflation always started from the resting volume of the respiratory system. After 1 min of each ventilatory pattern, mean inspiratory impedance and compliance of lung and respiratory system were measured. The values were unchanged or minimally altered by changing the type of ventilation. We conclude that the expiratory laryngeal loading is not primarily aimed to decrease the work of breathing. It is conceivable that the expiratory pattern is oriented to increase and control mean airway pressure in the regulation of pulmonary fluid reabsorption, distribution of ventilation, and diffusion of gases.  相似文献   

3.
The hypothesis that upper airway (UA) pressure and flow modulate respiratory muscle activity in a respiratory phase-specific fashion was assessed in anesthetized, tracheotomized, spontaneously breathing piglets. We generated negative pressure and inspiratory flow in phase with tracheal inspiration or positive pressure and expiratory flow in phase with tracheal expiration in the isolated UA. Stimulation of UA negative pressure receptors with body temperature air resulted in a 10--15% enhancement of phasic moving-time-averaged posterior cricoarytenoid electromyographic (EMG) activity above tonic levels obtained without pressure and flow in the UA (baseline). Stimulation of UA positive pressure receptors increased phasic moving-time-averaged thyroarytenoid EMG activity above tonic levels by 45% from baseline. The same enhancement of posterior cricoarytenoid or thyroarytenoid EMG activity was observed with the addition of flow receptor stimulation with room temperature air. Tidal volume and diaphragmatic and abdominal muscle activity were unaffected by UA flow and/or pressure, whereas respiratory timing was minimally affected. We conclude that laryngeal afferents, mainly from pressure receptors, are important in modulating the respiratory activity of laryngeal muscles.  相似文献   

4.
In twenty anaesthetized and spontaneously breathing rabbits airway pressures were measured above and below the larynx during tidal respiration through the larynx. Peak inspiratory and expiratory pressures at both sites were recorded in control conditions and then compared to values obtained in the course of progressive denervation of the airways. The two methods of denervation consisted of (1) bilateral section of superior and recurrent laryngeal nerves and of the midcervical vagotomy (horizontal method); (2) right-sided sections of the three nerves followed by left-sided sections (vertical method). Motor denervation of the larynx due to RLNs neurotomy (horizontal method) produced significant increases in intratracheal pressures in both phases of the respiratory cycle. Less prominent increments in pressures were achieved on RLNs neurotomy in the vertical method. SLNs section and vagotomy had little additional effect on airway pressures. Our results indicate that unilateral laryngeal palsy poses far smaller obstruction to breathing than simultaneous bilateral denervation, and that afferent denervation of the larynx has no effect on airway pressures.  相似文献   

5.
Upper airway exposure to cigarette smoke elicits reflex changes in breathing pattern. To examine whether laryngeal afferents are affected by cigarette smoke, neural activity was recorded from the peripheral cut end of superior laryngeal nerve in anesthetized dogs. A box-balloon system, connected to the breathing circuit, allowed smoke to be inhaled spontaneously through the isolated upper airway while preserving its normal respiratory flow and pressure. Our results showed the following. Inhalation of cigarette smoke (25-50% concentration, 300-400 ml) caused a marked increase in activity of laryngeal irritant receptors which were either silent or randomly discharging during control breathing [their activity increased from a control value of 1.67 +/- 0.50 (mean +/- SE; n = 21) to a peak of 5.03 +/- 0.85 impulses/s in 11-15 s]. The activity of laryngeal cold receptors was reduced to 77.3 and 63.8% of control (n = 9) during the two breaths of smoke inhalation, respectively. After returning toward the base-line activity, a more pronounced inhibition (26.3% of control) occurred at three to nine breaths after the smoke inhalation. A small but significant decrease (88.5% of control) in the inspiratory discharge of laryngeal mechanoreceptors was observed during the first test breath. These effects were independent of the CO2 content of the smoke. Furthermore, there was no difference between the responses of these laryngeal afferents to high- and low-nicotine cigarette smoke.  相似文献   

6.
The increase in systemic blood pressure after an obstructive apnea is due, in part, to sympathetically mediated vasoconstriction. We questioned whether upper airway (UA) receptors could contribute reflexly to this vasoconstriction. Four unanesthetized dogs were studied during wakefulness and non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep. The dogs breathed via a fenestrated tracheostomy tube sealed around the tracheal stoma. The snout was sealed with an airtight mask, thereby isolating the UA when the fenestration was closed and exposing the UA to negative inspiratory intrathoracic pressure when it was open. The blood pressure response to three UA perturbations was studied: 1) square-wave negative pressures sufficient to cause UA collapse with the fenestration closed during a mechanical hyperventilation-induced central apnea; 2) tracheal occlusion with the fenestration open vs. closed; and 3) high-frequency pressure oscillations (HFPO) with the fenestration closed. During NREM sleep, 1) blood pressure response to tracheal occlusion was similar with the fenestration open or closed; 2) collapsing the UA with negative pressures failed to alter blood pressure during a central apnea; and 3) application of HFPO to the UA during eupnea and resistive-loaded breaths increased heart rate and blood pressure. However, these changes were likely to be secondary to the effects of HFPO-induced reflex changes on prolonging expiratory time. These findings suggest that activation of UA pressure-sensitive receptors does not contribute directly to the pressor response associated with sleep-disordered breathing events.  相似文献   

7.
We evaluated the hypothesis that the tonic discharge of pulmonary stretch receptors significantly influences the respiratory-modulated activities of cranial nerves. Decerebrate and paralyzed cats were ventilated with a servo-respirator, which produced changes in lung volume in parallel with integrated phrenic activity. Activities of the facial, hypoglossal, and recurrent laryngeal nerves and nerves to the thyroarytenoid muscle and triangularis sterni were recorded. After a stereotyped pattern of lung inflation, tracheal pressure was held at 1, 2, 4, or 6 cmH2O during the subsequent ventilatory cycle. Increases in tracheal pressure caused progressive reductions in both inspiratory and expiratory cranial nerve activities and progressive elevations in triangularis sterni discharge; peak levels of phrenic activity declined modestly. Similar changes were observed in normocapnia and hypercapnia. We conclude that the tonic discharge of pulmonary stretch receptors is an important determinant of the presence and magnitude of respiratory-modulated cranial nerve activity. This reflex mechanism may maintain upper airway patency and also regulate expiratory airflow.  相似文献   

8.
The interaction between CO2 and negative pressure pulses on breathing pattern was investigated in 10 anesthetized, spontaneously breathing rabbits. The upper airway was functionally isolated into a closed system. A servo-respirator triggered by the inspiratory activity of the diaphragm was used to apply pressure pulses of -15 cmH2O to the isolated upper airway in early inspiration while the animal was breathing room air, 100% O2, 6% CO2 in O2, or 9% CO2 in O2. The negative pressure pulses produced a reversible inhibition of inspiration in most trials with resultant increase in inspiratory duration (TI); no change was observed in peak diaphragmatic electromyogram (Dia EMG) or expiratory duration, whereas a decrease was seen in mean inspiratory drive (peak Dia EMG/TI). This prolongation of inspiratory duration and decrease in mean inspiratory drive with negative pressure pulses persisted at higher levels of CO2; the slopes of the test breaths were not significantly different from that of control breaths. These results suggest that upper airway negative pressure pulses are equally effective in altering the breathing pattern at all levels of CO2.  相似文献   

9.
Airway obstruction during periodic breathing in premature infants   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To characterize changes in pulmonary resistance, timing, and respiratory drive during periodic breathing, we studied 10 healthy preterm infants (body wt 1,340 +/- 240 g, postconceptional age 35 +/- 2 wk). Periodic breathing in these infants was defined by characteristic cycles of ventilation with intervening respiratory pauses greater than or equal to 2 s. Nasal airflow was recorded with a pneumotachometer, and esophageal or pharyngeal pressure was recorded with a fluid-filled catheter. Pulmonary resistance at half-maximal tidal volume, inspiratory time (TI), expiratory time (TE), and mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI) were derived from computer analysis of five cycles of periodic breathing per infant. In 80% of infants periodic breathing was accompanied by completely obstructed breaths at the onset of ventilatory cycles; the site of airway obstruction occurred within the pharynx. The first one-third of the ventilatory phase of each cycle was accompanied by the highest airway resistance of the entire cycle (168 +/- 98 cmH2O.l-1.s). In all infants TI was greatest at the onset of the ventilatory cycle, VT/TI was maximal at the midpoint of the cycle, and TE was longest in the latter two-thirds of each cycle. A characteristic increase and subsequent decrease of 4.5 +/- 1.9 ml in end-expiratory volume also occurred within each cycle. These results demonstrate that partial or complete airway obstruction occurs during periodic breathing. Both apnea and periodic breathing share the element of upper airway instability common to premature infants.  相似文献   

10.
The interactive effects of upper airway negative pressure and hypercapnia on the pattern of breathing were assessed in pentobarbital-anesthetized cats. At any given level of pressure in the upper airway, hypercapnia increased respiratory rate, reduced inspiratory time, and augmented tidal volume, inspiratory airflow, and the peak and rate of rise of diaphragm electrical activity. Conversely, at any given level of CO2, upper airway negative pressure decreased respiratory rate, prolonged inspiratory time, and depressed inspiratory airflow and diaphragm electromyogram (EMG) rate of rise. Application of negative pressure to the upper airway shifted the relationship between tidal volume and inspiratory time upward and rightward. The relationship between inspiratory and expiratory times, however, was linearly correlated over a wide range of chemical drives and levels of upper airway pressure. These results suggest that in the anesthetized cat upper airway negative pressure afferent inputs 1) interact in an additive fashion with hypercapnia to alter the pattern of breathing, 2) interact multiplicatively with CO2 to influence mean inspiratory airflow and diaphragm EMG rate of rise, 3) depress the generation of central inspiratory activity, 4) increase the time-dependent volume threshold for inspiratory termination, and 5) affect the ratio between inspiratory and expiratory times in a similar manner as alterations in PCO2.  相似文献   

11.
We hypothesized that upper airway collapsibility is modulated dynamically throughout the respiratory cycle in sleeping humans by alterations in respiratory phase and/or airflow regimen. To test this hypothesis, critical pressures were derived from upper airway pressure-flow relationships in six tracheostomized patients with obstructive sleep apnea. Pressure-flow relationships were generated by varying the pressure at the trachea and nose during tracheostomy (inspiration and expiration) (comparison A) and nasal (inspiration only) breathing (comparison B), respectively. When a constant airflow regimen was maintained throughout the respiratory cycle (tracheostomy breathing), a small yet significant decrease in critical pressure was found at the inspiratory vs. end- and peak-expiratory time point [7.1 +/- 1.6 (SE) to 6.6 +/- 1.9 to 6.1 +/- 1.9 cmH(2)O, respectively; P < 0.05], indicating that phasic factors exerted only a modest influence on upper airway collapsibility. In contrast, we found that the inspiratory critical pressure fell markedly during nasal vs. tracheostomy breathing [1.1 +/- 1.5 (SE) vs. 6.1 +/- 1.9 cmH(2)O; P < 0.01], indicating that upper airway collapsibility is markedly influenced by differences in airflow regimen. Tracheostomy breathing was also associated with a reduction in both phasic and tonic genioglossal muscle activity during sleep. Our findings indicate that both phasic factors and airflow regimen modulate upper airway collapsibility dynamically and suggest that neuromuscular responses to alterations in airflow regimen can markedly lower upper airway collapsibility during inspiration.  相似文献   

12.
The influence of nasal airflow, temperature, and pressure on upper airway muscle electromyogram (EMG) was studied during steady-state exercise in five normal subjects. Alae nasi (AN) and genioglossus EMG activity was recorded together with nasal and oral airflows and pressures measured simultaneously by use of a partitioned face mask. At constant ventilations between 30 and 50 l/min, peak inspiratory AN activity during nasal breathing (7.2 +/- 1.4 arbitrary units) was greater than that during oral breathing (1.0 +/- 0.3 arbitrary units; P less than 0.005). In addition, the onset of AN EMG activity preceded inspiratory flow by 0.38 +/- 0.03 s during nasal breathing but by only 0.17 +/- 0.04 s during oral breathing (P less than 0.04). When the subject changed from nasal to oral breathing, both these differences were apparent on the first breath. However, peak AN activity during nasal breathing was uninfluenced by inspiration of hot saturated air (greater than 40 degrees C), by external inspiratory nasal resistance, or by changes in the expiratory route. The genioglossus activity did not differ between nasal and oral breathing (n = 2). Our findings do not support reflex control of AN activity sensitive to nasal flow, temperature, or surface pressure. We propose a centrally controlled feedforward modulation of phasic inspiratory AN activity linked with the tonic drive to the muscles determining upper airway breathing route.  相似文献   

13.
We studied the effects of cricothyroid muscle (CT) contraction on upper airway flow dynamics in eight prone open-mouth anesthetized dogs. Animals were mechanically ventilated via a tracheostomy while a constant airflow (Vuaw) passed through the isolated upper airway. Nasal airflow (Vn) was monitored using a nasal mask and pneumotachograph. Bilateral CT contraction was induced by electrical stimulation of the external branches of the superior laryngeal nerves. During CT contraction with Vuaw of 100-443 ml/s in the inspiratory direction, total upper airway resistance (Ruaw) fell by 49.1 +/- 5.4% (SE) while supraglottic resistance fell by 63.6 +/- 3.6%; simultaneously Vn fell by 55.3 +/- 3.8% and Vuaw increased by 7.2 +/- 1.7%. Similar results were obtained when Vuaw was in the expiratory direction. In three dogs in which the attachments of the CT to either the thyroid or cricoid cartilage were severed, superior laryngeal nerve stimulation had no systematic effect on Ruaw. Because visual assessment during CT contraction consistently revealed dilation of the piriform recesses, we suggest that CT contraction is associated with pharyngeal dilation, which in open-mouth dogs (with overlapping soft palate and epiglottis) redistributes flow to the oral route with a net reduction in Ruaw. Thus the CT may have a respiratory role as a pharyngeal dilator.  相似文献   

14.
We compared the changes in nasal and pharyngeal resistance induced by modifications in the central respiratory drive in 8 patients with sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) with the results of 10 normal men. Upper airway pressures were measured with two low-bias flow catheters; one was placed at the tip of the epiglottis and the other above the uvula. Nasal and pharyngeal resistances were calculated at isoflow. During CO2 rebreathing and during the 2 min after maximal voluntary hyperventilation, we continuously recorded upper airway pressures, airflow, end-tidal CO2, and the mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI); inspiratory pressure generated at 0.1 s after the onset of inspiration (P0.1) was measured every 15-20 s. In both groups upper airway resistance decreased as P0.1 increased during CO2 rebreathing. When P0.1 increased by 500%, pharyngeal resistance decreased to 17.8 +/- 3.1% of base-line values in SAS patients and to 34.9 +/- 3.4% in normal subjects (mean +/- SE). During the posthyperventilation period the VT/TI fell below the base-line level in seven SAS patients and in seven normal subjects. The decrease in VT/TI was accompanied by an increase in upper airway resistance. When the VT/TI decreased by 30% of its base-line level, pharyngeal resistance increased to 319.1 +/- 50.9% in SAS and 138.5 +/- 4.7% in normal subjects (P less than 0.05). We conclude that 1) in SAS patients, as in normal subjects, the activation of upper airway dilators is reflected by indexes that quantify the central inspiratory drive and 2) the pharyngeal patency is more sensitive to the decrease of the central respiratory drive in SAS patients than in normal subjects.  相似文献   

15.
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of inspiratory airway obstruction on lung fluid balance in newborn lambs. We studied seven 2- to 4-wk-old lambs that were sedated with chloral hydrate and allowed to breathe 30-40% O2 spontaneously through an endotracheal tube. We measured lung lymph flow, lymph and plasma protein concentrations, pulmonary arterial and left atrial pressures, mean and phasic pleural pressures and airway pressures, and cardiac output during a 2-h base-line period and then during a 2- to 3-h period of inspiratory airway obstruction produced by partially occluding the inspiratory limb of a nonrebreathing valve attached to the endotracheal tube. During inspiratory airway obstruction, both pleural and airway pressures decreased 5 Torr, whereas pulmonary arterial and left atrial pressures each decreased 4 Torr. As a result, calculated filtration pressure remained unchanged. Inspiratory airway obstruction had no effect on steady-state lung lymph flow or the lymph protein concentration relative to that of plasma. We conclude that in the spontaneously breathing lamb, any decrease in interstitial pressure resulting from inspiratory airway obstruction is offset by a decrease in microvascular hydrostatic pressure so that net fluid filtration remains unchanged.  相似文献   

16.
To examine the relationship between expiratory effort, expiratory flow, and glottic aperture, we compared the effects of actively and passively produced changes in flow in six normal subjects. During flow transients of 1.08 +/- 0.08 l/s produced by voluntary expiratory effort, glottic width (dg) increased by 54 +/- 13% (mean +/- SE). In contrast transient increases in expiratory flow, produced passively by chest compression, were not accompanied by increases in glottic dimensions. Similarly, when subjects expired through a resistance, transient passive increases in mouth pressure of 8.1 +/- 0.8 cmH2O failed to increase glottic width. However, when similar positive-pressure transients were produced actively, dg increased by 97 +/- 36% even though the expiratory efforts were accompanied by relatively small increases in flow (0.20 +/- 0.05 l/s). During tidal breathing glottic widening commenced 160 +/- 60 ms before the onset of inspiratory flow, whereas the widening associated with active flow and pressure transients did not measurably precede the onset of the change in flow or pressure. Our results indicate that transient expulsive efforts are associated with synchronous increases in dg, regardless of whether expiratory flow increases. The findings are most readily explained by a centrally determined synchronous recruitment of intrinsic laryngeal and expiratory muscles that facilitates lung emptying by minimizing airway resistance during forced exhalation.  相似文献   

17.
This study investigates the role of metabolic rate and of vagal airway mechanisms in sustaining rhythmic breathing in the developing lamb. Fifteen lambs were prepared, at 2 days of age under fluothane anaesthesia, for sequential studies at 4, 14, 30, 45, and 55 days of age. At each age they were maintained at an ambient temperature of 5, 10, 15, 20, 25 and 30 degrees C for at least one hour before measurements were made during N-REM sleep. In 6 lambs at 4 days and in all lambs at older ages the upper airway was by-passed (by opening a tracheal window) for 10-15 minutes at each ambient temperature. Oxygen consumption was unaffected by upper airway by-pass and there were no consistent changes in mean breathing frequency or amplitude, with the exception of shifts to panting at warm ambient temperatures. Breathing pattern was unaffected by upper airway by-pass in lambs at 4 days of age, but at older ages loss of regularity of breathing frequently occurred (up to 47% of 30 days-old lambs at 25 degrees C). This was related to the fall in oxygen consumption with age and to basal values at thermoneutrality, and coincided with lower respiratory rates and increased use of expiratory laryngeal braking. Periodic breathing (and apnea) of a fixed cycle length (9.3 +/- 0.36 s) was a common feature (62%) of the observed breathing dysrhythmia. In young lambs high metabolic rate sustained high frequency rhythmic breathing which was unaffected by upper airway by-pass.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

18.
Mean airway pressure underestimates mean alveolar pressure during high-frequency oscillatory ventilation. We hypothesized that high inspiratory flows characteristic of high-frequency jet ventilation may generate greater inspiratory than expiratory pressure losses in the airways, thereby causing mean airway pressure to overestimate, rather than underestimate, mean alveolar pressure. To test this hypothesis, we ventilated anesthetized paralyzed rabbits with a jet ventilator at frequencies of 5, 10, and 15 Hz, constant inspiratory-to-expiratory time ratio of 0.5 and mean airway pressures of 5 and 10 cmH2O. We measured mean total airway pressure in the trachea with a modified Pitot probe, and we estimated mean alveolar pressure as the mean pressure corresponding in the static pressure-volume relationship to the mean volume of the respiratory system measured with a jacket plethysmograph. We found that mean airway pressure was similar to mean alveolar pressure at frequencies of 5 and 10 Hz but overestimated it by 1.1 and 1.4 cmH2O at mean airway pressures of 5 and 10 cmH2O, respectively, when frequency was increased to 15 Hz. We attribute this finding primarily to the combined effect of nonlinear pressure frictional losses in the airways and higher inspiratory than expiratory flows. Despite the nonlinearity of the pressure-flow relationship, inspiratory and expiratory net pressure losses decreased with respect to mean inspiratory and expiratory flows at the higher rates, suggesting rate dependence of flow distribution. Redistribution of tidal volume to a shunt airway compliance is thought to occur at high frequencies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
Upper airway cooling and l-menthol reduce ventilation in the guinea pig.   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Cooling of the upper airway, which stimulates specific cold receptors and inhibits laryngeal mechanoreceptors, reduces respiratory activity in unanesthetized humans and anesthetized animals. This study shows that laryngeal cooling affects the pattern of breathing in the guinea pig and assesses the potential role of cold receptors in this response by using a specific stimulant of cold receptors (l-menthol). The response to airflows (30 ml/s, 10-s duration) through the isolated upper airway was studied in 23 anesthetized (urethan, 1 g/kg ip) guinea pigs breathing through a tracheostomy. Respiratory airflow, tidal volume, laryngeal temperature, and esophageal pressure were recorded before the challenges (control), during cold airflows (25 degrees C, 55% relative humidity), and during warm airflows (37 degrees C, saturated) with or without the addition of l-menthol. Whereas warm air trials had no effect, cold air trials, which lowered laryngeal but not nasal temperature, reduced ventilation (VE) to 85% of control, mainly by prolonging expiratory time (TE, 145% of control), an effect abolished by laryngeal anesthesia. Addition of l-menthol to the warm airflow caused a greater reduction in VE (41% of control) by prolonging TE (1,028% of control). Nasal anesthesia markedly reduced the apneogenic effect of l-menthol but did not affect the response to cold air trials. In conclusion, both cooling of the larynx and l-menthol in the laryngeal lumen reduce ventilation. Exposure of the nasal cavity to l-menthol markedly enhances this ventilatory inhibition; considering the stimulatory effect of l-menthol on cold receptors, these results suggest a predominant role of nasal cold receptors in this response.  相似文献   

20.
We tested the hypotheses that active upper airway closure during induced central apneas in nonsedated lambs 1). is complete and occurs at the laryngeal level and 2). is not due to stimulation of the superior laryngeal nerves (SLN). Five newborn lambs were surgically instrumented to record thyroarytenoid (TA) muscle (glottal constrictor) electromyographic (EMG) activity with supra- and subglottal pressures. Hypocapnic and nonhypocapnic central apneas were induced before and after SLN sectioning in the five lambs. A total of 174 apneas were induced, 116 before and 58 after sectioning of the internal branch of the SLN (iSLN). Continuous TA EMG activity was observed in 88% of apneas before iSLN section and in 87% of apneas after iSLN section. A transglottal pressure different from zero was observed in all apneas with TA EMG activity, with a mean subglottal pressure of 4.3 +/- 0.8 cmH2O before and 4.7 +/- 0.7 cmH2O after iSLN section. Supraglottal pressure was consistently atmospheric. Sectioning of both iSLNs had no effects on the results. We conclude that upper airway closure during induced central apneas in lambs is active, complete, and occurs at the glottal level only. Consequently, a positive subglottal pressure is maintained throughout the apnea. Finally, this complete active glottal closure is independent from laryngeal afferent innervation.  相似文献   

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