Respiratory neuronal activity during apnea and poststimulatory effects of laryngeal origin in the cat

Author:

Bongianni Fulvia1,Mutolo Donatella1,Carfì Marco1,Fontana Giovanni A.1,Pantaleo Tito1

Affiliation:

1. Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiologiche, Università degli Studi di Firenze, I-50134 Firenze, Italy

Abstract

We investigated the behavior of medullary respiratory neurons in cats under pentobarbitone anesthesia, vagotomized, paralysed, and artificially ventilated to elucidate neural mechanisms underlying apnea and poststimulatory respiratory depression induced by superior laryngeal nerve (SLN) stimulation. Inspiratory neurons were completely inhibited during SLN stimulation and poststimulatory apnea. During recovery of inspiratory activity, augmenting inspiratory neurons were depressed, decrementing inspiratory neurons were excited, and late inspiratory neurons displayed unchanged bursts closely locked to the end of the inspiratory phase. Augmenting expiratory neurons were either silenced or displayed different levels of tonic activity during SLN stimulation; some of them were clearly activated. These expiratory neurons displayed activity during poststimulatory apnea, before the onset of the first recovery phrenic burst. Postinspiratory or decrementing expiratory neurons were activated during SLN stimulation; their discharge continued with a decreasing trend during poststimulatory apnea. The results support the three-phase theory of rhythm generation and the view that SLN stimulation provokes a postinspiratory apnea that could represent the inhibitory component of respiratory reflexes of laryngeal origin, such as swallowing. In addition, because a subpopulation of augmenting expiratory neurons displays activation during SLN stimulation, the hypothesis can be advanced that not only postinspiratory, or decrementing expiratory neurons, but also augmenting expiratory neurons may be involved in the genesis of apnea and poststimulatory phenomena. Finally, the increase in the activity of decrementing inspiratory neurons after the end of SLN stimulation may contribute to the generation of poststimulatory respiratory depression by providing an inhibitory input to bulbospinal augmenting inspiratory neurons.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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