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1.
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   

2.
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   

3.
Phase locking of the respiratory rhythm in cats to a mechanical ventilator   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Mechanical ventilation of paralyzed, pentobarbital-anesthetized adult cats was performed while recording phrenic nerve activity. The periodic changes in lung volume owing to mechanical ventilation affected the rhythm of central respiratory activity, resulting in a variety of regular and irregular patterns of coupling between respiratory system output, monitored by phrenic activity, and the mechanical ventilator. Phase-locked patterns, in which phrenic burst onset occurred at specific and repetitive phase(s) of the mechanical ventilator, with ratios of ventilator frequency: phrenic burst frequency of 1:2, 1:1, 3:2, 2:1, and 3:1 were observed. Regular and irregular patterns occurred over specific ranges of frequency and volume of the mechanical ventilator. A careful study was made of the 1:1 phase locking as the frequency and inflation volume of the mechanical ventilator were changed. The inspiratory time (TI) was defined as the interval between the time when phrenic activity began to rise and the onset of its rapid decline, and the expiratory time (TE) as the time between inspirations. In the 1:1 phase-locking region, as the frequency of the ventilator was increased both TI and TE decreased, and the phase of phrenic onset in the ventilator cycle changed. During ventilation with frequencies higher than the intrinsic phrenic frequency (initial burst frequency of phrenic activity with the ventilator turned off) inspiratory activity was prematurely terminated by lung inflation (Hering-Breuer inspiratory inhibitory reflex). During ventilation with frequencies lower than the intrinsic phrenic frequency, the onset of phrenic activity was delayed (TE was prolonged) by lung inflation (Hering-Breuer expiratory promoting reflex).  相似文献   

4.
We studied the effects of removing cyclic pulmonary afferent neural information on respiratory pattern generation in anesthetized dogs. Phrenic neural output during spontaneous breathing (SB) was compared with that occurring during constant-flow ventilation (CFV) at several levels of eucapnic hypoxemia. Hypoxia caused an increase in both the frequency and the amplitude of the moving time average (MTA) phrenic neurogram during both SB and CFV. The change in frequency as arterial saturation was reduced from 90 to 60% during SB was significantly higher than that during CFV [SB, 32.3 +/- 10.9 (SD) breaths/min; CFV, 10.3 +/- 5.8 breaths/min; P = 0.001]. By contrast, the increase in the amplitude of the MTA phrenic neurogram was smaller (SB, 0.62 +/- 0.68 units; CFV, 1.35 +/- 0.81 units; P = 0.01). The changes in frequency with hypoxia during both modes of ventilation resulted primarily from a shortening of expiratory time. Both inspiratory time and expiratory time were greater during CFV than during SB, but their change in response to hypoxia was not significantly different. We conclude that the amplitude response of the MTA phrenic neurogram to hypoxia is similar to that seen during hypercapnia; in the presence of phasic afferent feedback the MTA amplitude response is decreased and the frequency response is increased relative to the response observed in the absence of phasic afferents.  相似文献   

5.
Hypercapnia attenuates the effects of static airway pressure (Paw) on phrenic burst frequency (f) and the expiratory duration (TE) in chloralose-urethan-anesthetized dogs. Surgical removal of the carotid bodies abolishes this interaction. Since halothane anesthesia in hyperoxia greatly impairs peripheral chemoreflexes, experiments were conducted to determine whether hypercapnia would attenuate the effects of Paw on f and TE in halothane-anesthetized dogs (approximately 1.5 minimum alveolar concentration). Integrated activity of the phrenic nerve was monitored as a function of Paw (2-12 cmH2O) in a vascularly isolated left lung at varied levels of arterial PCO2 (PaCO2; 38-80 Torr) controlled by inspired gas concentrations ventilating the denervated but perfused right lung. Halothane was administered only to the right lung. The results were as follows: 1) integrated phrenic amplitude increased with PaCO2 but was unaffected by Paw; 2) f decreased as Paw increased but was not affected by PaCO2; 3) the inspiratory duration (TI) increased as PaCO2 increased but was unaffected by Paw; 4) TE increased as Paw increased but was unaffected by PaCO2; and 5) there was no phrenic response to intravenous sodium cyanide (50-100 micrograms/kg). Thus, unlike chloralose-urethan-anesthetized dogs, hypercapnia does not attenuate the effect of lung inflation on f or TE in halothane-anesthetized dogs. Furthermore, hypercapnia increases TI during halothane anesthesia, an effect found after carotid denervation but not found in intact chloralose-urethan-anesthetized dogs. It is suggested that these differences between chloralose-urethan- and halothane-anesthetized dogs may be due to functional carotid chemoreceptor denervation by halothane.  相似文献   

6.
The role of phrenic afferents in controlling inspiratory duration (TI) at elevated end-expiratory lung volume (EEV) has been studied in pentobarbital-anesthetized, spontaneously breathing cats with intact vagi. Responses to increases in EEV, induced by imposition of an expiratory threshold load (ETL) of 10 cmH2O, were monitored before and after section of cervical dorsal roots C3-C7. The immediate (first-breath) effect of application of ETL was a prolongation of both TI and expiratory duration (TE). After 10 min of breathing against the ETL, average TI returned to control values but TE remained prolonged. Abolishing feedback from the diaphragm did not affect these responses. When steady-state responses to ETL were compared with those elicited by inhalation of 5-6% CO2 in O2, changes in EEV had, on average, no independent effect on respiratory drive (rate of rise of integrated phrenic activity), although phrenic activity increased greatly in some cats despite little or no change in arterial partial pressure of CO2. These data indicate that diaphragmatic receptors do not contribute to either the immediate (first-breath) or steady-state responses of phrenic motoneurons to increases in EEV in intact cats.  相似文献   

7.
We examined the effect of sudden withdrawal of respiratory oscillations of arterial PCO2 (CO2 oscillations) at resting metabolic rate on the control of respiration in 11 anesthetized paralyzed vagotomized dogs in normoxic normocapnia. A double-lumen endotracheal tube was inserted so that the left and right lungs were ventilated independently. By alternately ventilating each lung, we could completely abolish CO2 oscillations without affecting the mean blood gas levels (withdrawal of CO2 oscillations). The CO2 oscillation was calculated from arterial pH oscillation measured by a rapidly responding intra-arterial pH electrode. Respiratory center output was monitored by use of a moving time average of the phrenic neurogram. A 3-min period of withdrawal of CO2 oscillations was bracketed by two control periods (simultaneous ventilation of lungs for 3 min) to avoid the confounding effect of the baseline drift in the respiratory center output. The amplitude of the CO2 oscillations in the control was 2.33 +/- 0.89 (SD) Torr. When the difference in the mean level of arterial PCO2 between the control and withdrawal of CO2 oscillations was minimized (-0.09 +/- 0.54 Torr; P greater than 0.25), we found negligible change in the minute phrenic activity during withdrawal of CO2 oscillations (-0.02 +/- 6.11% of the control, P greater than 0.98, n = 49; 99% confidence interval -2.36 to 2.32%). Thus we conclude that the maintenance of normal respiration at rest is not critically dependent on a phasic afferent input to the respiratory center arising from respiratory CO2 oscillations.  相似文献   

8.
To study the changes in ventilation induced by inspiratory flow-resistive (IFR) loads, we applied moderate and severe IFR loads in chronically instrumented and awake sheep. We measured inspired minute ventilation (VI), ventilatory pattern [inspiratory time (TI), expiratory time (TE), respiratory cycle time (TT), tidal volume (VT), mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI), and respiratory duty cycle (TI/TT)], transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi), functional residual capacity (FRC), blood gas tensions, and recorded diaphragmatic electromyogram. With both moderate and severe loads, Pdi, TI, and TI/TT increased, TE, TT, VT, VT/TI, and VI decreased, and hypercapnia ensued. FRC did not change significantly with moderate loads but decreased by 30-40% with severe loads. With severe loads, arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) stabilized at approximately 60 Torr within 10-15 min and rose further to levels exceeding 80 Torr when Pdi dropped. This was associated with a lengthening in TE and a decrease in breathing frequency, VI, and TI/TT. We conclude that 1) timing and volume responses to IFR loads are not sufficient to prevent alveolar hypoventilation, 2) with severe loads the considerable increase in Pdi, TI/TT, and PaCO2 may reduce respiratory muscle endurance, and 3) the changes in ventilation associated with neuromuscular fatigue occur after the drop in Pdi. We believe that these ventilatory changes are dictated by the mechanical capability of the respiratory muscles or induced by a decrease in central neural output to these muscles or both.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
The aim of this study was to demonstrate that the medullary respiratory rhythm generator is capable of entraining to respiratory oscillations of arterial PCO2 (CO2 oscillations). We used 10 anesthetized, paralyzed, vagotomized, and mechanically ventilated dogs. First, rate of mechanical ventilation was manually adjusted so that it matched the dog's spontaneous respiratory rate, which established a constant phase relationship between the mechanical ventilation and the burst of phrenic neurogram (initial phase). Then this phase relationship was temporally disturbed by a brief electrical stimulation of the superior laryngeal nerve (SLN). In the control group, the initial phase and the steady-state phase relationship after SLN stimulation were randomly distributed within the phase plane, implying no interaction between the respiratory center and mechanical ventilation. In contrast, when CO2 output from the lung was increased 2.6-fold above the control level by venous CO2 loading, the initial phase and the steady-state phase after SLN stimulation were locked in such a way that the onset of the burst of phrenic neurogram coincided with the peak of CO2 oscillations. This was not demonstrated when the dog was made hyperoxic. We therefore conclude that the respiratory center could entrain to phasic chemical afferent inputs originating from CO2 oscillations, provided they are considerably amplified.  相似文献   

11.
Acute head-downtilt (AHDT, 30°) in humans induces a transient ventilatoryaugmentation for 1-2 min accompanied by a high venous return.However, the mechanisms underlying this respiratory response remainobscure because of limitations of experiments carried out in humansubjects. The present study was undertaken to determine whetherAHDT-induced respiratory augmentation exists in the anesthetized,paralyzed, and ventilated cat and, if so, whether this response dependson 1) the cerebellum,2) the carotid sinus (CS)and/or vagal afferents, and3) elevation of central venousreturn. The integrated phrenic neurogram, arterial blood pressure,central venous pressure (CVP), and end-tidalPCO2 were recorded before, during,and after AHDT. The results showed that AHDT produced a transient (~2min) enhancement of minute phrenic activity (~30%) primarily via anincrease in peak integrated phrenic neurogram amplitude associated witha remarkable elevation of CVP (~3 min). Cerebellectomy, CSdenervation, bilateral vagotomy, or clamping CVP did not affect thepresence of the AHDT-induced minute phrenic activity response. Thesefindings demonstrate that the anesthetized cat is a suitable model forinvestigating the mechanisms involved in AHDT-induced respiratoryaugmentation. Preliminary studies suggest that this response does notrequire the cerebellum, CS/vagal afferents, or an associated rise incentral venous return.

  相似文献   

12.
We measured the moving time average (MTA) of the phrenic neurogram before and after removal of phasic afferent information from the lungs, chest wall, and oscillations in blood gases by using constant-flow ventilation (CFV). Anesthetized dogs were studied at various levels of steady-state and progressive hypercapnia during spontaneous breathing and during CFV. When steady-state and progressive hypercapnia were compared, the frequency and height of the MTA phrenic neurogram were independent of the rate of induction of hypercapnia during each mode of ventilation. During spontaneous ventilation, the response to hypercapnia comprised mainly an increase in frequency with only a slight increase in the amplitude of the MTA phrenic waveform. During muscular paralysis and CFV, the responses were similar to those observed after vagotomy with mainly an increase in the amplitude and only a small increase in frequency. For both spontaneous breathing and CFV, increases in frequency were achieved mainly by a shortening in expiratory time with the inspiratory time remaining relatively constant. Our data support the concept of a centrally patterned respiratory generator, whose inherent pattern is modified by phasic feedback from peripheral receptors mainly of vagal origin.  相似文献   

13.
The perfused in situ juvenile rat preparation produces patterns of phrenic discharge comparable to eupnea and gasping in vivo. These ventilatory patterns differ in multiple aspects, including most prominently the rate of rise of inspiratory activity. Although we have recently demonstrated that both eupnea and gasping are similarly modulated by a Hering-Breuer expiratory-promoting reflex to tonic pulmonary stretch, it has generally been assumed that gasping was unresponsive to afferent stimuli from pulmonary stretch receptors. In the present study, we recorded eupneic and gasplike efferent activity of the phrenic nerve in the in situ juvenile rat perfused brain stem preparation, with and without phrenic-triggered phasic pulmonary inflation. We tested the hypothesis that phasic pulmonary inflation produces reflex responses in situ akin to those in vivo and that both eupnea and gasping are similarly modulated by phasic pulmonary stretch. In eupnea, we found that phasic pulmonary inflation decreases inspiratory burst duration and the period of expiration, thus increasing burst frequency of the phrenic neurogram. Phasic pulmonary inflation also decreases the duration of expiration and increases the burst frequency during gasping. Bilateral vagotomy eliminated these changes. We conclude that the neural substrate mediating the Hering-Breuer reflex is retained in the in situ preparation and that the brain stem circuitry generating the respiratory patterns respond to phasic activation of pulmonary stretch receptors in both eupnea and gasping. These findings support the homology of eupneic phrenic discharge patterns in the reduced in situ preparation and eupnea in vivo and disprove the common supposition that gasping is insensitive to vagal afferent feedback from pulmonary stretch receptor mechanisms.  相似文献   

14.
In cats anesthetized with chloralose-urethan, vagotomized, paralyzed, and artifically ventilated, superficial radial (cutaneous) and hamstring (muscle) nerve afferents were stimulated while phrenic nerve electrical activity was recorded. The results obtained with both types of nerves were similar. Stimulation in mid and late expiration advanced the onset of the next inspiration, shortening its duration. Stimulation in early inspiration advanced, while that in late inspiration delayed, the onset of the next expiration. These effects were often accompanied by changes in phrenic motoneuron firing patterns (earlier recruitment, increased discharge frequency, increased slope of integrated phrenic neurogram). Repetitive somatic afferent stimulation produced sustained increases in respiratory frequency in all cats and in half of them entrainment of respiratory frequency to the frequency of stimulation occurred at ratios such as 4:3, 4:5, 1:2, 1:3, 1:4, and 1:7. The lowest stimulus intensity required for evoking these phase shifts was between 5 and 10T (threshold of most excitable fibers) for muscle afferents and between 1 and 2T for cutaneous afferents. These results demonstrate the existence of a reflex mechanism capable of locking respiratory frequency to that of a periodic somatic afferent input. They also provide an experimental basis for the hypothesis that reflexes are resposible for the observed locking between step or pedal frequency and respiratory rate during exercise in man.  相似文献   

15.
The purpose of the present study was to examine the respiratory motor response to diaphragm fatigue. Studies were performed using in situ diaphragm muscle strips dissected from the left costal diaphragm in anesthetized dogs. The left inferior phrenic artery was isolated, and diaphragmatic strip fatigue was elicited by occluding this vessel. Strip tension, strip electromyographic activity, parasternal electromyographic activity, and the electromyogram of the right hemidiaphragm were recorded during spontaneous breathing efforts before, during, and after periods of phrenic arterial occlusion. In separate trials, we examined the neuromuscular responses to phrenic arterial occlusion at arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) of 40, 55, and 75 Torr. No fatigue and no alteration in electromyographic activities were observed in trials at PaCO2 of 40 Torr. During trials at PaCO2 of 55 and 75 Torr, however, diaphragm tension fell, the peak height of the diaphragm strip electromyogram decreased, and the peak heights of the parasternal and right hemidiaphragm electromyograms increased. Relief of phrenic arterial occlusion resulted in a return of strip tension and all electromyograms toward base-line values. In additional experiments, the left phrenic nerve was sectioned in the chest after producing fatigue. Phrenic section was followed by an increase in the peak height of the left phrenic neurogram (recorded above the site of section). This latter finding suggests that diaphragm strip motor drive may be reflexly inhibited during the development of fatigue by neural traffic carried along phrenic afferents.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
In supracollicular decerebrate paralyzed adult rats, neural respiration was monitored by bilateral phrenic recordings. In the study of respiratory cycle timing, the effects of vagal afferent input (lung inflation) on respiratory phase durations resembled those seen in decerebrate cats. 1) Withholding lung inflation during neural inspiration (I) produced lengthening of I phase duration by 46% (mean, n = 11). 2) Maintaining lung inflation during neural expiration (E) produced lengthening of E phase duration by 112% (mean, n = 4). In the study of fast rhythms in inspiratory discharges, phrenic nerve autospectra and bilateral (left-right) phrenic coherences in 16 rats revealed two types of fast rhythm: 1) high-frequency oscillation (HFO), which had significant coherence peaks (n = 9, range 106-160 Hz, mean 132 Hz); and 2) medium-frequency oscillation (MFO), which had autospectral peaks but no distinct coherence peaks (n = 11, range 46-96 Hz, mean 66 Hz). These rhythms resembled MFOs and HFOs in the decerebrate cat, but the modal frequency range was about twice as large. In addition, these frequency values differed markedly from the 20-40 Hz of the rhythms found in earlier studies in neonatal in vitro preparations; the difference may be due to developmental immaturity.  相似文献   

18.
Recovery from respiratory inhibition produced by the lung inflation reflex was studied in anesthetized dogs, paralyzed and ventilated with a respiratory pump. During constant ventilation the lungs were periodically inflated using positive end-expiratory pressure, while the respiratory motor output was monitored in the phrenic nerve. Inhibition of the phrenic discharge was followed by gradual recovery throughout 8-min inflation periods despite constant blood gases. Recording afferent potentials in a vagus nerve indicated that adaptation of pulmonary stretch receptors contributed to the initial recovery of the phrenic discharge, but this recovery continued after the receptor discharge had stabilized. The phrenic discharge also recovered after initial inhibition in two situations which avoided stretch receptor adaptation: a) when the stretch receptor discharge from the separate lungs was alternated in an overlapping manner by asynchronous pulmonary ventilation, and b) during continuous electrical stimulation of a vagus nerve. Phrenic activity was temporarily increased above its control value after periods of lung inflation, asynchronous ventilation and vagal stimulation. It is concluded that the lung inflation reflex gradually attenuates during prolonged stimulation due to both stretch receptor adaptation and changes within the central pathways.  相似文献   

19.
In anesthetized artificially ventilated cats, diaphragmatic fatigue was produced by direct muscle stimulation with trains of pulses for 30 min. Failure of contraction was assessed from decrease in the maximal relaxation rate of transdiaphragmatic pressure twitches. Motor activities (electromyogram and motor phrenic neurogram) were processed by fast-Fourier transform analysis, which provided the power spectrum density function (PSDF). The discharge frequency of diaphragmatic afferents was also measured. In control conditions (before fatigue), intra-arterial bolus injection of lactic acid enhanced tonically active diaphragmatic afferents, whereas it reduced the firing rate of afferent fibers activated in phase with diaphragmatic contraction or relaxation. The same sensory response pattern was observed with the development of diaphragmatic fatigue. Leftward shift in PSDFs of motor phrenic neurogram also occurred, but it preceded the failure of diaphragmatic contraction as well as the changes in the electromyogram's PSDF and afferent paths, which were closely associated with lengthening of both inspiratory and total breath durations. After section of the phrenic nerves, the motor phrenic response disappeared during the fatigue trial. This demonstrates the existence of complex reflex-induced changes in the ventilatory control during diaphragmatic fatigue. They seem to involve the participation of several types of phrenic afferents.  相似文献   

20.
We measured tidal volume (VT) and inspiratory (TI) and expiratory (TE) durations in five conscious tracheostomized dogs breathing air or 5% CO2 in air either at normal (20 degrees C) or elevated (30 degrees C) ambient temperatures. Respiratory frequency ranged between 16 and 333/min due to changes in both TI and TE. During panting TI exceeded TE. During air inhalation instantaneous ventilation (V) spontaneously ranged from 100 to 1,600 ml . kg-1 . min-1. Hypercapnia, heat stress, or both, increased this range of V by increasing maximum V, primarily due to increases in mean inspiratory flow. Under these conditions, changes in TI accounted for more of the spontaneous changes in breath duration. During inhalation of air and 5% CO2, a positive correlation between VT and TI was obtained for TI between 0.13 and 1.05 s; above 1.05 s VT decreased. Heat stress increased VT at a given TI. We suggest that either the decay rate or position of the inspiratory off-switch threshold curve (Clark and von Euler, J. Physiol. London 222: 267, 1972) varies in conscious dogs. Shifts in either the reset (onset) value or decay rate of the curve yield a positive correlation between VT and TI. This modification to the Clark-von Euler model implies that the primary effect of anesthesia on respiratory control is fixation of the inspiratory off-switch threshold curve.  相似文献   

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