Literature DB >> 21729770

Systemic inflammation impairs respiratory chemoreflexes and plasticity.

A G Huxtable1, S Vinit, J A Windelborn, S M Crader, C H Guenther, J J Watters, G S Mitchell.   

Abstract

Many lung and central nervous system disorders require robust and appropriate physiological responses to assure adequate breathing. Factors undermining the efficacy of ventilatory control will diminish the ability to compensate for pathology, threatening life itself. Although most of these same disorders are associated with systemic and/or neuroinflammation, and inflammation affects neural function, we are only beginning to understand interactions between inflammation and any aspect of ventilatory control (e.g. sensory receptors, rhythm generation, chemoreflexes, plasticity). Here we review available evidence, and present limited new data suggesting that systemic (or neural) inflammation impairs two key elements of ventilatory control: chemoreflexes and respiratory motor (versus sensory) plasticity. Achieving an understanding of mechanisms whereby inflammation undermines ventilatory control is fundamental since inflammation may diminish the capacity for natural, compensatory responses during pathological states, and the ability to harness respiratory plasticity as a therapeutic strategy in the treatment of devastating breathing disorders, such as during cervical spinal injury or motor neuron disease.
Copyright © 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21729770      PMCID: PMC3172820          DOI: 10.1016/j.resp.2011.06.017

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Respir Physiol Neurobiol        ISSN: 1569-9048            Impact factor:   1.931


  122 in total

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  35 in total

Review 1.  Unexpected benefits of intermittent hypoxia: enhanced respiratory and nonrespiratory motor function.

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3.  Adenosine-dependent phrenic motor facilitation is inflammation resistant.

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Review 5.  Gestational intermittent hypoxia increases susceptibility to neuroinflammation and alters respiratory motor control in neonatal rats.

Authors:  Stephen M Johnson; Karanbir S Randhawa; Jenna J Epstein; Ellen Gustafson; Austin D Hocker; Adrianne G Huxtable; Tracy L Baker; Jyoti J Watters
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Review 8.  Asthma and Obstructive Sleep Apnea Overlap: What Has the Evidence Taught Us?

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9.  Phrenic long-term facilitation following intrapleural CTB-SAP-induced respiratory motor neuron death.

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10.  Systemic LPS induces spinal inflammatory gene expression and impairs phrenic long-term facilitation following acute intermittent hypoxia.

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