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J Appl Physiol 102: 54-62, 2007. First published September 7, 2006; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00720.2006
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Focal warming in the nucleus of the solitary tract prolongs the laryngeal chemoreflex in decerebrate piglets

L. Xia, T. A. Damon, J. C. Leiter, and D. Bartlett, Jr.

Department of Physiology, Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, New Hampshire

Submitted 27 June 2006 ; accepted in final form 2 September 2006

The laryngeal chemoreflex (LCR), elicited by a drop of water in the larynx, is exaggerated by mild hyperthermia (body temperature = 40–41°C) in neonatal piglets. We tested the hypothesis that thermal prolongation of the LCR results from heating the nucleus of the solitary tract (NTS), where laryngeal afferents first form synapses in the brain stem. Three- to 13-day-old piglets were decerebrated and vagotomized and studied without anesthesia while paralyzed and ventilated. Phrenic nerve activity and rectal temperature were recorded. A thermode was placed in the medulla, and the brain tissue temperature was recorded with a thermistor ~1 mm from the tip of the thermode. When the thermode was inserted into the brain stem, respiratory activity was arrested or greatly distorted in eight animals. However, the thermode was inserted in nine animals without disrupting respiratory activity, and in these animals, warming the medullary thermode (thermistor temperature = 40–41°C) while holding rectal temperature constant reversibly exaggerated the LCR. The caudal raphé was warmed focally by ~2°C in four additional animals; this did not alter the duration of the LCR in these animals. Thermodes placed in the NTS did not disrupt respiratory activity, but they did prolong the LCR when warmed. Thermodes that were placed deep to the NTS in the region of the nucleus ambiguus disrupted respiratory activity, which precluded any analysis of the LCR. We conclude that prolongation of the laryngeal chemoreflex by whole body hyperthermia originates from the elevation of brain tissue temperature within in the NTS.

hyperthermia; neonatal piglets; sudden infant death syndrome



Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: J. C. Leiter, Dept. of Physiology, Dartmouth Medical School, Lebanon, NH 03756 (e-mail: james.c.leiter{at}dartmouth.edu)







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