Journal of Applied Physiology  AJP: Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 66: 1613-1619, 1989;
8750-7587/89 $5.00
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Journal of Applied Physiology, Vol 66, Issue 4 1613-1619, Copyright © 1989 by American Physiological Society


ARTICLES

Tonic activity in inspiratory muscles and phrenic motoneurons by stimulation of vagal afferents

M. Badier, Y. Jammes, P. Romero-Colomer and C. Lemerre
Laboratoire de Medecine Experimentale, Faculte de Medecine, Marseille, France.

In anesthetized rabbits, direct and integrated phrenic neurogram (Ephr) and electromyograms from the diaphragm (Edi) and intercostal (Eic) (2nd space) and transversus abdominis muscles (Etr) were simultaneously recorded in two protocols. 1) In animals breathing spontaneously, we used infinite inspiratory (RI) or expiratory (RE) resistive load and intravenous injections of carbachol, histamine, or phenyl diguanide (PDG). All circumstances except RE evoked tonic activities in Ephr, Edi, and Eic but never in Etr. Intravenous atropine abolished carbachol-induced bronchoconstriction and associated tonic inspiratory activities, but this effect persisted with RI, histamine, and PDG. Selective procaine block of conduction in thin vagal fibers (with persistence of the Breuer-Hering inflation reflex) reduced or suppressed the tonic response, which was abolished in all cases after vagotomy. 2) In rabbits artificially ventilated with open chest, passive deflation of the lung or intravenous injections of histamine or PDG also produced tonic discharge in Ephr and often in Eic. The present results demonstrate that 1) stimulation of vagal afferents and mostly thin sensory fibers elicits tonic inspiratory discharges, 2) bronchoconstriction is not necessary for the induction of the response, and 3) reflexes from the chest wall do not mediate this response in rabbits.


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J. Physiol., September 1, 2005; 567(2): 641 - 650.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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