Pattinson Kyle T S, Governo Ricardo J, MacIntosh Bradley J, Russell Elizabeth C, Corfield Douglas R, Tracey Irene, Wise Richard G
Nuffield Department of Anaesthetics, University of Oxford, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3 9DU, United Kingdom.
J Neurosci. 2009 Jun 24;29(25):8177-86. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1375-09.2009.
Respiratory depression limits provision of safe opioid analgesia and is the main cause of death in drug addicts. Although opioids are known to inhibit brainstem respiratory activity, their effects on cortical areas that mediate respiration are less well understood. Here, functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to examine how brainstem and cortical activity related to a short breath hold is modulated by the opioid remifentanil. We hypothesized that remifentanil would differentially depress brain areas that mediate sensory-affective components of respiration over those that mediate volitional motor control. Quantitative measures of cerebral blood flow were used to control for hypercapnia-induced changes in blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal. Awareness of respiration, reflected by an urge-to-breathe score, was profoundly reduced with remifentanil. Urge to breathe was associated with activity in the bilateral insula, frontal operculum, and secondary somatosensory cortex. Localized remifentanil-induced decreases in breath hold-related activity were observed in the left anterior insula and operculum. We also observed remifentanil-induced decreases in the BOLD response to breath holding in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate, the cerebellum, and periaqueductal gray, brain areas that mediate task performance. Activity in areas mediating motor control (putamen, motor cortex) and sensory-motor integration (supramarginal gyrus) were unaffected by remifentanil. Breath hold-related activity was observed in the medulla. These findings highlight the importance of higher cortical centers in providing contextual awareness of respiration that leads to appropriate modulation of respiratory control. Opioids have profound effects on the cortical centers that control breathing, which potentiates their actions in the brainstem.
呼吸抑制限制了安全使用阿片类镇痛药,并是吸毒者死亡的主要原因。虽然已知阿片类药物会抑制脑干呼吸活动,但其对介导呼吸的皮质区域的影响尚了解较少。在此,我们使用功能磁共振成像来研究阿片类药物瑞芬太尼如何调节与短暂屏气相关的脑干和皮质活动。我们假设瑞芬太尼对介导呼吸感觉 - 情感成分的脑区的抑制作用会不同于介导意志性运动控制的脑区。使用脑血流量的定量测量来控制高碳酸血症引起的血氧水平依赖(BOLD)信号变化。瑞芬太尼使由呼吸冲动评分反映的呼吸意识显著降低。呼吸冲动与双侧岛叶、额盖和次级体感皮层的活动相关。在左前岛叶和额盖观察到瑞芬太尼引起的与屏气相关活动的局部降低。我们还观察到瑞芬太尼使左背外侧前额叶皮层、前扣带回、小脑和导水管周围灰质(介导任务执行的脑区)对屏气的BOLD反应降低。介导运动控制(壳核、运动皮层)和感觉 - 运动整合(缘上回)的区域的活动不受瑞芬太尼影响。在延髓观察到与屏气相关的活动。这些发现突出了更高皮质中枢在提供呼吸情境意识以导致呼吸控制适当调节方面的重要性。阿片类药物对控制呼吸的皮质中枢有深远影响,这增强了它们在脑干中的作用。