Baertsch N A, Baker T L
Department of Comparative Biosciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2015 Linden Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Department of Comparative Biosciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 2015 Linden Drive, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Exp Neurol. 2017 Jan;287(Pt 2):235-242. doi: 10.1016/j.expneurol.2016.07.020. Epub 2016 Jul 26.
Two critical parameters that influence breathing stability are the levels of arterial pCO at which breathing ceases and subsequently resumes - termed the apneic and recruitment thresholds (AT and RT, respectively). Reduced respiratory neural activity elicits a chemoreflex-independent, long-lasting increase in phrenic burst amplitude, a form of plasticity known as inactivity-induced phrenic motor facilitation (iPMF). The physiological significance of iPMF is unknown. To determine if iPMF and neural apnea have long-lasting physiological effects on breathing, we tested the hypothesis that patterns of neural apnea that induce iPMF also elicit changes in the AT and RT. Phrenic nerve activity and end-tidal CO were recorded in urethane-anesthetized, ventilated rats to quantify phrenic nerve burst amplitude and the AT and RT before and after three patterns of neural apnea that differed in their duration and ability to elicit iPMF: brief intermittent neural apneas, a single brief "massed" neural apnea, or a prolonged neural apnea. Consistent with our hypothesis, we found that patterns of neural apnea that elicited iPMF also resulted in changes in the AT and RT. Specifically, intermittent neural apneas progressively decreased the AT with each subsequent neural apnea, which persisted for at least 60min. Similarly, a prolonged neural apnea elicited a long-lasting decrease in the AT. In both cases, the magnitude of the AT decrease was proportional to iPMF. In contrast, the RT was transiently decreased following prolonged neural apnea, and was not proportional to iPMF. No changes in the AT or RT were observed following a single brief neural apnea. Our results indicate that the AT and RT are differentially altered by neural apnea and suggest that specific patterns of neural apnea that elicit plasticity may stabilize breathing via a decrease in the AT.
影响呼吸稳定性的两个关键参数是呼吸停止和随后恢复时的动脉血二氧化碳分压水平,分别称为呼吸暂停阈值和恢复阈值(分别为AT和RT)。呼吸神经活动减少会引发一种与化学反射无关的、膈神经爆发幅度的持久增加,这是一种被称为非活动诱导膈神经运动易化(iPMF)的可塑性形式。iPMF的生理意义尚不清楚。为了确定iPMF和神经呼吸暂停是否对呼吸有持久的生理影响,我们检验了这样一个假设,即诱导iPMF的神经呼吸暂停模式也会引起AT和RT的变化。在氨基甲酸乙酯麻醉、通气的大鼠中记录膈神经活动和呼气末二氧化碳,以量化膈神经爆发幅度以及三种神经呼吸暂停模式前后的AT和RT,这三种模式在持续时间和引发iPMF的能力上有所不同:短暂间歇性神经呼吸暂停、单次短暂“集中”神经呼吸暂停或长时间神经呼吸暂停。与我们的假设一致,我们发现引发iPMF的神经呼吸暂停模式也会导致AT和RT的变化。具体而言,间歇性神经呼吸暂停会使每次后续神经呼吸暂停的AT逐渐降低,这种降低至少持续60分钟。同样,长时间神经呼吸暂停会引发AT的持久降低。在这两种情况下,AT降低的幅度与iPMF成正比。相比之下,长时间神经呼吸暂停后RT会短暂降低,且与iPMF不成正比。单次短暂神经呼吸暂停后未观察到AT或RT的变化。我们的结果表明,AT和RT会因神经呼吸暂停而发生不同程度的改变,并表明引发可塑性的特定神经呼吸暂停模式可能通过降低AT来稳定呼吸。