Bureau M A, Lamarche J, Foulon P, Dalle D
Respir Physiol. 1985 Apr;60(1):109-19. doi: 10.1016/0034-5687(85)90043-x.
Neonates of various species including lambs respond to hypoxia by a transient hyperventilation followed by a VE depression (diphasic response). To better delineate the role of the carotid chemoreceptors and that of the central depressive/inhibitive effect of hypoxia on minute ventilation, we have studied the VE response of 4-day-old carotid body-deprived lambs (CBD) during successive exposure to moderate and severe (0.12 and 0.07 FIO2) hypoxia. The carotid body denervation was done to abolish most of the chemoreceptor stimulating effect on VE during hypoxia and to allow for central depression/inhibition of VE during hypoxia. In the CBD lambs, baseline VE was 461 +/- 81 (SE) ml X (kg X min)-1. It increased to 532 +/- 79 ml X (kg X min)-1 and to 541 +/- 75 ml X (kg X min)-1, to 0.12 FIO2 and 0.07 FIO2. These VE increases did not reach level of significance (P greater than 0.05). After 2-5 min of both levels of hypoxia VE dropped respectively to 460 +/- 60 ml X (kg X min)-1 and to 459 +/- 38 ml X (kg X min)-1. No marked ventilatory depressions were noted but VE had only returned to baseline. It is concluded that, in the denervated newborn lamb, the centrally mediated depressive effect of hypoxia is small and not sufficient to explain the diphasic VE response of the intact lamb to steady state hypoxia. Analysis of the magnitude of the hyperventilation and the VE damping pre-hypoxic levels occurring with sustained hypoxia in newborns of various species suggests that the immaturity of the O2-sensitive chemoreceptor rather than the central effect of hypoxia is the determinant factor of the diphasic response of newborn mammals to hypoxic hypoxia.