4.6 Article

The essential role of peripheral respiratory chemoreceptor inputs in maintaining breathing revealed when CO2 stimulation of central chemoreceptors is diminished

期刊

JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON
卷 591, 期 6, 页码 1507-1521

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1113/jphysiol.2012.247304

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资金

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Chancellerie des Universites de Paris, France
  3. Bourse de voyage de la Societe de Pneumologie de Langue Francaise (Boehringer-Ingelheim)
  4. AIHS

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Key points center dot Central sleep apnoea is a condition characterized by oscillations between apnoea and hyperpnoea during sleep, which can have many serous health implications. center dot Each ventilatory overshoot following an Central sleep apnoea is a condition characterized by oscillations between apnoea and hyperpnoea during sleep. Studies in sleeping dogs suggest that withdrawal of peripheral chemoreceptor (carotid body) activation following transient ventilatory overshoots plays an essential role in causing apnoea, raising the possibility that sustaining carotid body activity during ventilatory overshoots may prevent apnoea. To test whether sustained peripheral chemoreceptor activation is sufficient to drive breathing, even in the absence of central chemoreceptor stimulation and vagal feedback, we used a vagotomized, decerebrate dual-perfused in situ rat preparation in which the central and peripheral chemoreceptors are independently and artificially perfused with gas-equilibrated medium. At varying levels of carotid body stimulation (CB PO2/PCO2: 40/60, 100/40, 200/15, 500/15Torr), we decreased the brainstem perfusate PCO2 in 5Torr steps while recording phrenic nerve activity to determine the central apnoeic thresholds. The central apnoeic thresholds decreased with increased carotid body stimulation. When the carotid bodies were strongly stimulated (CB 40/60), the apnoeic threshold was 3.6 +/- 1.4Torr PCO2 (mean +/- SEM, n=7). Stimulating carotid body afferent activity with either hypercapnia (60Torr PCO2) or the neuropeptide pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide restored phrenic activity during central apnoea. We conclude that peripheral stimulation shifts the central apnoeic threshold to very hypocapnic levels that would likely increase the CO2 reserve and have a protective effect on breathing. These data demonstrate that peripheral respiratory chemoreceptors are sufficient to stave off central apnoeas when the brainstem is perfused with low to no CO2.

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