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1 Unité de Néonatologie, Centre de Recherche, Hôpital Saint-François d'Assise, Université Laval, Quebec, Canada G1L 3L5; and 2 Laboratoire de Physiologie, Faculté de Médecine de Nancy, Vandoeuvre les Nancy 54505, France
Received 7 March 1996; accepted in final form 15 October 1996.
Bairam, A., P. De Grandpré, C. Dauphin, and F. Marchal. Effects of caffeine on carotid sinus nerve
chemosensory discharge in kittens and cats. J. Appl.
Physiol. 82(2): 413-418, 1997.
Caffeine (C)
decreases apneic episodes in premature infants and is thought to
stimulate breathing mainly by a central mechanism. While the methylxanthines theophylline and aminophylline are known to alter the
carotid chemoreceptor activity, there are little data on C. The aim of
the study was to examine the effects of C on the carotid sinus nerve
discharge (CSND) in developing animals. Nine kittens 17-21 days
old and six adult cats that were anesthetized and artificially ventilated were studied. They received four consecutive doses of C,
each of 10 mg/kg, administered at intervals of 20 min either as
intravenous bolus injection (6 kittens, 3 cats) or continuous infusion
(3 kittens, 3 cats). Bolus injections of C invariably induced a prompt
but transient increase in the CSND from 4.1 ± 0.6 to 8.1 ± 1.0 (SE) impulses/s in kittens (P = 0.01)
and from 3.9 ± 0.1 to 7.9 to 1.0 impulses/s in cats (after the
first injection). This response was associated with a significant
decrease in arterial blood pressure. Continuous infusion of C did not
induce any early change in either CSND or blood pressure in kittens or
cats. Fifteen minutes after C injection or infusion was begun, CSND
values in air, 8% O2-balance
N2, or 100%
O2 were not significantly
different from control. Haloperidol administered at the
end of the experiment in four cats and four kittens significantly
increased CSND and did not suppress the early response to C injection.
It is concluded that caffeine administered by bolus in the kitten
induces a transient stimulation of the CSND that is associated with a
decrease in the arterial blood pressure and is independent of the
dopaminergic mechanisms in the carotid body. The lack of sustained
effect implies the main mechanism to the ventilatory stimulation by C
must be central.
arterial blood pressure; chemoreceptor; dopaminergic mechanisms; hypoxia; methylxanthines
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