Premium
Long‐term facilitation of ventilation following repeated hypoxic episodes in awake goats.
Author(s) -
Turner D L,
Mitchell G S
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
the journal of physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.802
H-Index - 240
eISSN - 1469-7793
pISSN - 0022-3751
DOI - 10.1113/jphysiol.1997.sp021947
Subject(s) - hypoxic ventilatory response , hypoxia (environmental) , tidal volume , anesthesia , ventilation (architecture) , respiratory system , medicine , respiratory minute volume , facilitation , respiratory rate , oxygen , heart rate , chemistry , biology , blood pressure , neuroscience , mechanical engineering , organic chemistry , engineering
1. This study tested two hypotheses: (1) that episodic hypoxia elicits long‐term facilitation (LTF) in respiratory neurons that is manifest as an increase in ventilation in awake goats; and (2) that LTF causes complex changes in respiratory pattern which are responsible for the increase in ventilation. 2. Each goat participated in two protocols. In the first, inspired gas mixtures were alternated between isocapnic normoxia and hypoxia (arterial partial pressure of oxygen, Pa,O2 = 47 mmHg) for ten cycles. Each hypoxic episode lasted 3 min and normoxic intervals were 5 min. Ventilatory variables were measured during the last minute of each episode and periodically for up to 1 h following the last hypoxic episode. The second, sham protocol was undertaken at least 2 weeks later and was identical to the first, except that isocapnic hypoxia was replaced with normoxia. 3. Inspired ventilation (VI) increased during the first isocapnic hypoxic episode and reached progressively higher levels in subsequent hypoxic episodes. VI also increased progressively among normoxic intervals, such that by the tenth normoxic interval, it had increased 68% relative to the comparable sham value (P < 0.05). Respiratory frequency (FR), tidal volume and mean inspiratory flow all contributed to the augmented VI during both isocapnic normoxia and hypoxia. The increase in VI lasted up to 40 min after the final hypoxic episode, with an increased FR making the greatest contribution. The persistent increase in VI strongly suggests that episodic hypoxia elicits LTF in respiratory neurons in the awake goat. Complex changes in respiratory pattern underpin the ventilatory manifestation of LTF.