Literature DB >> 17110415

Electroencephalographic evidence for pre-motor cortex activation during inspiratory loading in humans.

Mathieu Raux1, Christian Straus, Stefania Redolfi, Capucine Morelot-Panzini, Antoine Couturier, François Hug, Thomas Similowski.   

Abstract

Faced with mechanical inspiratory loading, awake animals and anaesthetized humans develop alveolar hypoventilation, whereas awake humans do defend ventilation. This points to a suprapontine compensatory mechanism instead of or in addition to the 'traditional' brainstem respiratory regulation. This study assesses the role of the cortical pre-motor representation of inspiratory muscles in this behaviour. Ten healthy subjects (age 19-34 years, three men) were studied during quiet breathing, CO2-stimulated breathing, inspiratory resistive loading, inspiratory threshold loading, and during self-paced voluntary sniffs. Pre-triggered ensemble averaging of Cz EEG epochs starting 2.5 s before the onset of inspiration was used to look for pre-motor activity. Pre-motor potentials were present during voluntary sniffs in all subjects (average latency (+/-s.d.): 1325 +/- 521 ms), but also during inspiratory threshold loading (1427 +/- 537 ms) and during inspiratory resistive loading (1109 +/- 465 ms). Pre-motor potentials were systematically followed by motor potentials during inspiratory loading. Pre-motor potentials were lacking during quiet breathing (except in one case) and during CO2-stimulated breathing (except in two cases). The same pattern was observed during repeated experiments at an interval of several weeks in a subset of three subjects. The behavioural component of inspiratory loading compensation in awake humans could thus depend on higher cortical motor areas. Demonstrating a similar role of the cerebral cortex in the compensation of disease-related inspiratory loads (e.g. asthma attacks) would have important pathophysiological implications: it could for example contribute to explain why sleep is both altered and deleterious in such situations.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17110415      PMCID: PMC2075143          DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2006.120246

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Physiol        ISSN: 0022-3751            Impact factor:   5.182


  32 in total

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  27 in total

Review 1.  The output from human inspiratory motoneurone pools.

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3.  Respiratory-related cortical activity in patients with COPD and aged normal individuals: towards a different vision of dyspnoea?

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Review 4.  Ventilatory control in infants, children, and adults with bronchopulmonary dysplasia.

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5.  Electroencephalographic detection of respiratory-related cortical activity in humans: from event-related approaches to continuous connectivity evaluation.

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6.  Inspiratory pre-motor potentials during quiet breathing in ageing and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

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7.  Respiration modulates oscillatory neural network activity at rest.

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8.  Effects of inspiratory loading on the chaotic dynamics of ventilatory flow in humans.

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Review 10.  Unrecognized suffering in the ICU: addressing dyspnea in mechanically ventilated patients.

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