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Long-term facilitation of phrenic nerve activity in cats: responses and short time scale correlations of medullary neurones
1. Stimulation of either peripheral chemoreceptors or nucleus raphe obscurus results in long-term facilitation of phrenic motoneurone activity. The first objective of this work was to measure the concurrent responses of neurones in the nucleus raphe obscurus, the nucleus tractus solitarii, and the r...
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Published in: | The Journal of physiology 1996-01, Vol.490 (Pt 2), p.463-480 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | 1. Stimulation of either peripheral chemoreceptors or nucleus raphe obscurus results in long-term facilitation of phrenic
motoneurone activity. The first objective of this work was to measure the concurrent responses of neurones in the nucleus
raphe obscurus, the nucleus tractus solitarii, and the regions of the retrofacial nucleus, nucleus ambiguus and nucleus retroambigualis
during induction of long-term facilitation. A second goal was to assess functional relationships of the chemoresponsive raphe
neurones with neurones in the other monitored locations and with phrenic motoneurones. 2. Up to thirty single medullary neurones
and phrenic nerve efferent activity were recorded simultaneously in fifteen anaesthetized, paralysed, vagotomized, artificially
ventilated adult cats. Carotid chemoreceptors were stimulated by close arterial injection of 200 microliters of CO2-saturated
saline solution. Spike trains were analysed with cycle-triggered histograms and two statistical tests for respiratory modulation.
Peristimulus-time histograms and cumulative sum histograms were used to assess responses to stimulation. Cross-correlation
was used to test for non-random temporal relationships between spike trains. Spike-triggered average histograms provided evidence
for functional associations with phrenic motoneurones. 3. One hundred and thirteen of 348 neurones were monitored in the nucleus
raphe obscurus. The firing rates of twenty-nine raphe neurones increased during stimulation; eighteen decreased. In twenty-one
pairs of concurrently monitored raphe neurones, the firing rate of one increased its activity during stimulation then decreased,
while the other showed an increase that began as the rate of the former declined. Eighteen chemoresponsive raphe neurones
had short time scale features in their phrenic spike-triggered averages. Short time scale features were found in cross-correlograms
from 184 of 1407 neurone pairs. 4. The data suggest parallel routes by which carotid chemoreceptors influence medullary raphe
neurones and support the hypotheses that mid-line respiratory-related neuronal assemblies transform information from those
receptors and regulate the gain of respiratory motor output. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1996.sp021158 |