Perturbations in three medullary nuclei enhance fractionated breathing in awake goats
Departments of 1 Pediatrics and 2 Physiology, Medical College of Wisconsin and Zablocki Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Milwaukee 53226; and 3 Department of Physical Therapy, Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201 Our aim was to determine the frequency and characteristics of a fraction...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of applied physiology (1985) 2003-04, Vol.94 (4), p.1508-1518 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Departments of 1 Pediatrics and
2 Physiology, Medical College of Wisconsin and
Zablocki Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Milwaukee 53226; and
3 Department of Physical Therapy, Marquette University,
Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53201
Our aim was
to determine the frequency and characteristics of a fractionated
pattern of diaphragm and upper airway muscle activity and airflow
during wakefulness and sleep in adult goats. A fractionated
breath (FBr) was defined as three or more brief (40-150 ms)
interruptions in the diaphragm activity not associated with multiple
swallows, eructation, mastication, or movement. During a FBr, the
discharge pattern in the diaphragm and upper airway muscles showed
complete cycles of inspiration and expiration. Whereas the interval
between peak diaphragm activity of the breath preceding the FBr to the
first diaphragm peak of the FBr was 15-20% less than the average
interval of the preceding five control breaths, the breath-to-breath
interval of the five breaths after a FBr did not differ from the
control breaths before the FBr event. In normal goats, FBr was evident
in only 4 of 18 (22%) awake goats and in only one of these goats
during non-rapid eye movement sleep. In 35 goats with implanted
microtubules in the medulla, FBr were present in 14 (40%) goats. In
these goats with FBr, 78% (11 of 14) had one or more implantations
into or near the facial, vestibular, or raphe nuclei. The effect of
perturbations in these nuclei is probably nonspecific, because
injections into these nuclei with mock cerebrospinal fluid or
excitatory amino acid-receptor agonist or antagonist produced both
increases and decreases in the frequency of the FBr while not altering
their characteristics. Finally, a swallow occurred at the termination
or during the first breath after 60% of the FBr. We speculate that the
FBr manifest 1 ) the disruption of a neuronal network, which
coordinates breathing and other functions (such as swallowing),
utilizing the same anatomic structures, and/or 2 ) transient
changes in synaptic inputs that increase the rate of the normal
respiratory rhythm generator or allow an ectopic, anomalous generator
to become dominant.
respiration; diaphragm; fractionations; pharyngeal muscles; excitatory amino acid receptors |
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ISSN: | 8750-7587 1522-1601 |
DOI: | 10.1152/japplphysiol.00837.2002 |