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Inspiratory drive and phase duration during carotid chemoreceptor stimulation in the cat: medullary neurone correlations
1. This study addressed the hypothesis that there is a parallel processing of input from carotid chemoreceptors to brainstem neurones involved in inspiratory phase timing and control of inspiratory motor output amplitude. Data were from fifteen anaesthetized, bilaterally vagotomized, paralysed, arti...
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Published in: | The Journal of physiology 1996-02, Vol.491 (Pt 1), p.241-259 |
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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. This study addressed the hypothesis that there is a parallel processing of input from carotid chemoreceptors to brainstem
neurones involved in inspiratory phase timing and control of inspiratory motor output amplitude. Data were from fifteen anaesthetized,
bilaterally vagotomized, paralysed, artificially ventilated cats. Carotid chemoreceptors were stimulated by close arterial
injection of 200 microliters of CO2-saturated saline solution. 2. Planar arrays of tungsten microelectrodes were used to monitor
simultaneously up to twenty-two neurones in the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) and ventral respiratory group (VRG). Spike
trains were analysed with two statistical tests of respiratory modulation, cycle-triggered histograms, peristimulus-time histograms,
cumulative sum histograms and cross-correlograms. 3. In NTS, 16 of 26 neurones with respiratory and 12 of 27 without respiratory
modulation changed firing rate during carotid chemoreceptor stimulation. In the VRG 72 of 112 respiratory and 14 of 48 non-respiratory
neurones changed firing rate during stimulation. 4. The spike trains of 85 of 1276 pairs (6.7%) of cells exhibited short time
scale correlations indicative of paucisynaptic interactions. Ten pairs of neurones were each composed of a rostral VRG phasic
inspiratory neurone that responded to carotid chemoreceptor stimulation with a decline in firing rate and a caudal VRG phasic
inspiratory neurone that increased its firing rate. Cross-correlograms from two of the pairs had features consistent with
excitation of the caudal neurones by the rostral cells. A decrease in the duration of activity of the rostral VRG neurones
was paralleled by the decrease in inspiratory time of phrenic nerve activity. Caudal VRG inspiratory neurones increased their
activity as phrenic amplitude increased. Spike-triggered averages of all four neurones indicated post-spike facilitation of
phrenic motoneurones. 5. The results support the hypothesis that unilateral stimulation of carotid chemoreceptors results
in parallel actions. (a) Inhibition of rostral VRG I-Driver neurones decreases inspiratory duration. (b) Concurrent excitation
of premotor VRG and dorsal respiratory group inspiratory neurones increases inspiratory drive to phrenic motoneurones. Other
data suggest that responsive ipsilateral neurones act to regulate contralateral neurones. |
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ISSN: | 0022-3751 1469-7793 |
DOI: | 10.1113/jphysiol.1996.sp021212 |