Discharge Identity of Medullary Inspiratory Neurons is Altered during Repetitive Fictive Cough
Autor: | Roger Shannon, Lauren S. Segers, Russell O'Connor, Andrea Vovk, Sarah C. Nuding, David M. Baekey, Kendall F. Morris, Teresa Pitts, Bruce G. Lindsey, Donald C. Bolser |
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Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: |
breathing
Physiology medulla Stimulation Respiratory pattern lcsh:Physiology Tonic (physiology) 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine cough Physiology (medical) Medicine Respiratory system respiratory pattern generator Medulla 030304 developmental biology Original Research 0303 health sciences lcsh:QP1-981 business.industry nervous system Anesthesia expiratory inspiratory business 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Frontiers in Physiology Frontiers in Physiology, Vol 3 (2012) |
ISSN: | 1664-042X |
Popis: | This study investigated the stability of the discharge identity of inspiratory decrementing (I Dec) and augmenting (I Aug) neurons in the caudal (cVRC) and rostral (rVRC) ventral respiratory column during repetitive fictive cough in the cat. Inspiratory neurons in the cVRC (n = 23) and rVRC (n = 17) were recorded with microelectrodes. Fictive cough was elicited by mechanical stimulation of the intrathoracic trachea. Approximately 43% (10 of 23) of I Dec neurons shifted to an augmenting discharge pattern during the first cough cycle (C1). By the second cough cycle (C2), half of these returned to a decrementing pattern. Approximately 94% (16 of 17) of I Aug neurons retained an augmenting pattern during C1 of a multi-cough response episode. Phrenic burst amplitude and inspiratory duration increased during C1, but decreased with each subsequent cough in a series of repetitive coughs. As a step in evaluating the model-driven hypothesis that VRC I-Dec neurons contribute to the augmentation of inspiratory drive during cough via inhibition of VRC tonic expiratory neurons that inhibit premotor inspiratory neurons, cross-correlation analysis was used to assess relationships of tonic expiratory cells with simultaneously recorded inspiratory neurons. Our results suggest that reconfiguration of inspiratory-related sub-networks of the respiratory pattern generator occurs on a cycle by cycle basis during repetitive coughing. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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