Integration-differentiation and gating of carotid afferent traffic that shapes the respiratory pattern
1 Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139; and 2 Department of Cell and Molecular Physiology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599 The phase-dependent plasticity of carotid chemoafferen...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of applied physiology (1985) 2003-03, Vol.94 (3), p.1213-1229 |
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Zusammenfassung: | 1 Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and
Technology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge,
Massachusetts 02139; and 2 Department of Cell and
Molecular Physiology, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,
North Carolina 27599
The phase-dependent
plasticity of carotid chemoafferent signaling was studied with
electrical stimulation of a carotid sinus nerve during either
inspiration or expiration in anesthetized, glomectomized, vagotomized,
paralyzed, and ventilated rats. Stroboscopic and interferometric
analyses of the resulting phase-contrast disturbances of the
respiratory rhythm revealed that carotid chemoafferent traffic was
dynamically filtered centrally by a parallel bank of leaky integrators
and differentiators, each being logically gated to the inspiratory or
expiratory phase in a stop-and-go manner as follows: 1 )
carotid short-term potentiation of inspiratory drive was mediated by
dual integrators that both shortened inspiration and augmented phrenic
motor output cooperatively in long and short timescales; 2 )
carotid short-term depression of respiratory frequency was mediated by
a (possibly pontine) integrator that lengthened expiration with a
relatively long memory; and 3 ) carotid "chemoreflex" shortening of expiration was mediated by an occult fast integrator, which, together with carotid short-term depression, formed a
differentiator. These effects were modulated anteriorly by integrators
in the nucleus tractus solitarius that were "auto-gated" to, or
recruited by, the carotid sinus nerve input. Such phase-selective and
activity-dependent time-frequency filtering of carotid chemoafferent
feedback in parallel neurological-neurodynamic central pathways may
profoundly affect respiratory stability during hypoxia and sleep and
could contribute to the dynamic optimization of the respiratory pattern and maintenance of homeostasis in health and in disease states.
short-term potentiation and depression; neural plasticity; respiratory stability; stroboscopic interferometric filtering
technique; neural integrator and differentiator |
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ISSN: | 8750-7587 1522-1601 |
DOI: | 10.1152/japplphysiol.00639.2002 |