|
|
||||||||
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Long Island Jewish Medical Center, Long Island Campus for the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New Hyde Park, New York 11040
Received 11 December 1995; accepted in final form 26 September 1996.
Greenberg, Harly E., Rammohan S. Rao, Anthony L. Sica, and
Steven M. Scharf. Effect of chronic resistive loading on hypoxic
ventilatory responsiveness. J. Appl.
Physiol. 82(2): 500-507, 1997.
Depression of
ventilation mediated by endogenous opioids has been observed acutely
after resistive airway loading. We evaluated the effects of chronically
increased airway resistance on hypoxic ventilatory responsiveness
shortly after load imposition and 6 wk later. A circumferential
tracheal band was placed in 200-g rats, tripling tracheal resistance.
Sham surgery was performed in controls. Ventilation and the ventilatory
response to hypoxia were measured by using barometric plethysmography
at 2 days and 6 wk postsurgery in unanesthetized rats during exposure
to room air and to 12% O2-5%
CO2-balance
N2. Trials were performed with and
without naloxone (1 mg/kg ip). Room air arterial blood gases demonstrated hypercapnia with normoxia in obstructed rats at 2 days and
6 wk postsurgery. During hypoxia, a 30-Torr fall in
PO2 occurred with no change in
PCO2. Hypoxic ventilatory responsiveness was suppressed in obstructed rats at 2 days postloading. Naloxone partially reversed this suppression. However, hypoxic responsiveness at 6 wk was not different from control levels. Naloxone
had a small effect on ventilatory pattern at this time with no overall
effect on hypoxic responsiveness. This was in contrast to previously
demonstrated long-term suppression of
CO2 sensitivity in this model,
which was partially reversible by naloxone only during the immediate
period after load imposition. Endogenous opioids apparently modulate
ventilatory control acutely after load imposition. Their effect wanes
with time despite persistence of depressed
CO2 sensitivity.
control of ventilation; ventilatory loads; endogenous opioids; hypoxic response
This article has been cited by other articles:
![]() |
Y. Segev, N. Berdugo-Boura, O. Porati, and A. Tarasiuk Upper airway loading induces growth retardation and change in local chondrocyte IGF-I expression is reversed by stimulation of GH release in juvenile rats J Appl Physiol, November 1, 2008; 105(5): 1602 - 1609. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
A. Tarasiuk and Y. Segev Chronic upper airway resistive loading induces growth retardation via the GH/IGF-I axis in prepubescent rats J Appl Physiol, March 1, 2007; 102(3): 913 - 918. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Visit Other APS Journals Online |