Literature DB >> 15677524

Time-dependent modulation of carotid body afferent activity during and after intermittent hypoxia.

Kevin J Cummings1, Richard J A Wilson.   

Abstract

The ventilatory response to several minutes of hypoxia consists of various time-dependent phenomena, some of which occur during hypoxia (e.g., short-term depression), whereas others appear on return to normoxia (e.g., posthypoxic frequency decline). Additional phenomena can be elicited by acute, intermittent hypoxia (e.g., progressive augmentation, long-term facilitation). Current data suggest that these phenomena originate centrally. We tested the hypothesis that carotid body afferent activity undergoes time-dependent modulation, consistent with a direct role in these ventilatory phenomena. Using an in vitro rat carotid body preparation, we found that 1) afferent activity declined during the first 5 min of severe (40 Torr Po(2)), moderate (60 Torr Po(2)), or mild (80 Torr Po(2)) hypoxia; 2) after return to normoxia (100 Torr Po(2)) and after several minutes of moderate or severe hypoxia, afferent activity was transiently reduced compared with prehypoxic levels; and 3) with successive 5-min bouts of mild, moderate, or severe hypoxia, afferent activity during bouts increased progressively. We call these phenomena sensory hypoxic decline, sensory posthypoxic decline, and sensory progressive augmentation, respectively. These phenomena were stimulus specific: similar phenomena were not seen with 5-min bouts of normoxic hypercapnia (100 Torr Po(2) and 50-60 Torr Pco(2)) or hypoxic hypocapnia (60 Torr Po(2) and 30 Torr Pco(2)). However, bouts of either normoxic hypercapnia or hypocapnic hypoxia resulted in sensory long-term facilitation. We suggest time-dependent carotid body activity acts in parallel with central mechanisms to shape the dynamics of ventilatory responses to respiratory chemostimuli.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15677524     DOI: 10.1152/ajpregu.00788.2004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol        ISSN: 0363-6119            Impact factor:   3.619


  18 in total

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9.  Role of nitric oxide-containing factors in the ventilatory and cardiovascular responses elicited by hypoxic challenge in isoflurane-anesthetized rats.

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10.  Acute intermittent hypoxia with concurrent hypercapnia evokes P2X and TRPV1 receptor-dependent sensory long-term facilitation in naïve carotid bodies.

Authors:  Arijit Roy; Melissa M J Farnham; Fatemeh Derakhshan; Paul M Pilowsky; Richard J A Wilson
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2018-01-04       Impact factor: 5.182

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