| Literature DB >> 3363233 |
A Jonzon1, T E Pisarri, A M Roberts, J C Coleridge, H M Coleridge.
Abstract
In open chest, artificially ventilated, anesthetized dogs, we examined the effect of vagal cooling on the pulmonary afferent input evoked by hyperinflating the lungs to 3 VT, recording the activity of slowly adapting pulmonary stretch receptors (PSRs), rapidly adapting receptors (RARs) and pulmonary C fibers rostral to the cooling platform. At 15 degrees C and below, input in all three types of fiber was significantly reduced, attenuation being least marked in C fibers. Between 12 degrees C and 7 degrees C, attenuation of RAR input was significantly less than that of PSRs. At 7 degrees C, virtually none of the hyperinflation-evoked increase in PSR activity and only 10% of that in RARs passed the cooling platform--indeed RAR input was less than during normal ventilation at 37 degrees C; by contrast, 40% of the hyperinflation-evoked increase in C fiber activity was still transmitted. Cooling had similar effects on C fiber input evoked by capsaicin. If reflexes are attenuated in proportion to the attenuation of afferent input, our results suggest that a hyperinflation-evoked reflex that survives vagal cooling below 6 degrees C is almost certainly triggered by C fibers.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 1988 PMID: 3363233 DOI: 10.1016/0034-5687(88)90076-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Respir Physiol ISSN: 0034-5687