Journal of Applied Physiology
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J Appl Physiol 87: 1059-1065, 1999;
8750-7587/99 $5.00
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Vol. 87, Issue 3, 1059-1065, September 1999

Pontine cholinergic mechanisms enhance trigeminally evoked respiratory suppression in the anesthetized rat

Mathias Dutschmann and Horst Herbert

Department of Animal Physiology, University of Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 28, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany

In the present study, we investigated in anesthetized rats the influences of the pontine rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep center on trigeminally induced respiratory responses. We evoked the nasotrigeminal reflex by electrical stimulation of the ethmoidal nerve (EN5) and analyzed the EN5-evoked respiratory suppression before and after injections into the pontine reticular nuclei of the cholinergic agonist carbachol. After injections of 80-100 nl of carbachol (20 mM), we observed a decrease in respiratory rate, respiratory minute volume, and blood pressure but an increase in tidal volume. In those cases in which carbachol injections alone caused these REM sleep-like autonomic responses, we also observed that the EN5-evoked respiratory suppression was significantly potentiated. Unfortunately, carbachol injections failed to depress genioglossus electromyogram (EMG) effectively, because the EMG activity was already strongly depressed by the anesthetic alpha -chloralose. We assume that pontine carbachol injections in our anesthetized rats cause autonomic effects that largely resemble REM sleep-like respiratory and vascular responses. We therefore conclude that the observed potentiation of EN5-evoked respiratory suppression after carbachol might be due to REM sleep-associated neuronal mechanisms. We speculate that activation of sensory trigeminal afferents during REM sleep might contribute to pathological REM sleep-associated respiratory failures.

sudden infant death syndrome; apnea; rapid-eye-movement sleep; Kölliker-Fuse; diving response





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