| Literature DB >> 6815323 |
B A Cross, A Davey, A Guz, P G Katona, M MacLean, K Murphy, S J Semple, R Stidwill.
Abstract
1. The effect of electrically induced ;exercise' on the respiratory oscillation of arterial pH was studied in chloralose-anaesthetized dogs with spinal cord transection at T8/9 (dermatome level T6/7).2. Respiratory oscillations of arterial pH (presumed to be due to oscillations of arterial P(CO2)) were sensed with a fast-responding electrode in one carotid artery. Breath-by-breath estimates of the maximum rate of change of pH of the downstroke of the pH oscillation (dpH/dt downward arrowmax) were obtained by differentiating the pH signal.3. Consistent with the findings of the previous paper (Cross et al. 1982), the ventilatory response to exercise could not be explained on the basis of sensitivity to CO(2); the Delta V(I)/DeltaP(a, CO2) was significantly greater for ;exercise' than for CO(2) inhalation.4. On average, the amplitude of the pH oscillations decreased during ;exercise'. The change in the phase relationship (varphi) between respiratory and pH cycles, although significant from the second breath onwards, was not thought to be responsible for the increased ventilation V(I); the direction of the change was opposite to that previously found to increase V(I).5. Inspiratory duration (t(i)), expiratory duration (t(e)), V(I) and the dpH/dt downward arrowmax changed significantly by the third breath of ;exercise'. A significantly linear relationship was obtained between t(e) and dpH/dt downward arrowmax during the on-transient (first ten breaths) of ;exercise'. This relationship was maintained throughout ;exercise'. V(I) and dpH/dt downward arrowmax were also linearly related during the on-transient, although the same relationship did not hold true throughout ;exercise'.6. The dpH/dt downward arrowmax was related to CO(2) production ( V(CO2)) lending support to the prediction that the slope of the downstroke of the pH oscillation is a function of V(CO2).7. It was concluded that the dpH/dt downward arrowmax (dpCO(2)/dt upward arrowmax) is a potential humoral signal in ;exercise' and could account totally for the shortening of t(e). Since there was a late rise in V(I) (due to an increase in tidal volume V(T)) in the absence of a change in dpH/dt downward arrowmax, it was considered unlikely that the dpH/dt downward arrowmax was the only humoral signal present during ;exercise'.Entities:
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Year: 1982 PMID: 6815323 PMCID: PMC1224767 DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.1982.sp014290
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol ISSN: 0022-3751 Impact factor: 5.182