Panneton W Michael, Gan Qi
Department of Pharmacological and Physiological Science, School of Medicine, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO, United States.
Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, MO, United States.
Front Neurosci. 2020 Jun 5;14:524. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2020.00524. eCollection 2020.
The mammalian diving response (DR) is a remarkable behavior that was first formally studied by Laurence Irving and Per Scholander in the late 1930s. The DR is called such because it is most prominent in marine mammals such as seals, whales, and dolphins, but nevertheless is found in all mammals studied. It consists generally of breathing cessation (apnea), a dramatic slowing of heart rate (bradycardia), and an increase in peripheral vasoconstriction. The DR is thought to conserve vital oxygen stores and thus maintain life by directing perfusion to the two organs most essential for life-the heart and the brain. The DR is important, not only for its dramatic power over autonomic function, but also because it alters normal homeostatic reflexes such as the baroreceptor reflex and respiratory chemoreceptor reflex. The neurons driving the reflex circuits for the DR are contained within the medulla and spinal cord since the response remains after the brainstem transection at the pontomedullary junction. Neuroanatomical and physiological data suggesting brainstem areas important for the apnea, bradycardia, and peripheral vasoconstriction induced by underwater submersion are reviewed. Defining the brainstem circuit for the DR may open broad avenues for understanding the mechanisms of suprabulbar control of autonomic function in general, as well as implicate its role in some clinical states. Knowledge of the proposed diving circuit should facilitate studies on elite human divers performing breath-holding dives as well as investigations on sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), stroke, migraine headache, and arrhythmias. We have speculated that the DR is the most powerful autonomic reflex known.
哺乳动物潜水反应(DR)是一种非凡的行为,最早在20世纪30年代末由劳伦斯·欧文(Laurence Irving)和佩尔·斯科兰德(Per Scholander)进行正式研究。之所以称其为潜水反应,是因为它在海豹、鲸鱼和海豚等海洋哺乳动物中最为显著,但在所有被研究的哺乳动物中都能发现。它通常包括呼吸停止(呼吸暂停)、心率急剧减慢(心动过缓)以及外周血管收缩增强。潜水反应被认为可以保存重要的氧气储备,从而通过将血液灌注引导至对生命最重要的两个器官——心脏和大脑来维持生命。潜水反应不仅因其对自主功能具有显著作用而重要,还因为它会改变正常的稳态反射,如压力感受器反射和呼吸化学感受器反射。驱动潜水反应反射回路的神经元包含在延髓和脊髓内,因为在脑桥延髓交界处进行脑干横切术后,该反应仍然存在。本文综述了神经解剖学和生理学数据,这些数据表明脑干区域对水下浸没引起的呼吸暂停、心动过缓和外周血管收缩很重要。确定潜水反应的脑干回路可能为总体上理解自主功能的上脑干控制机制开辟广阔途径,并暗示其在某些临床状态中的作用。了解所提出的潜水回路应有助于对进行屏气潜水的优秀人类潜水员的研究,以及对婴儿猝死综合征(SIDS)、中风、偏头痛和心律失常的研究。我们推测潜水反应是已知最强大的自主反射。