PROTECTIVE VENTILATORY RESPONSES TO HYPOXIA
对缺氧的保护性通气反应
基本信息
- 批准号:6108930
- 负责人:
- 金额:$ 20.4万
- 依托单位:
- 依托单位国家:美国
- 项目类别:
- 财政年份:1999
- 资助国家:美国
- 起止时间:1999-04-01 至 2000-03-31
- 项目状态:已结题
- 来源:
- 关键词:
项目摘要
The protective response to hypoxia is organized in two layers. With
initial exposure, eupneic ventilation increase. In severe hypoxia, eupnea
is replaced by gasping, which promotes "autoresuscitation."
The eupneic ventilatory response to hypoxia changes with development. In
the newborn, ventilation rises and then falls. With age, the hypoxia-
induced augmentation becomes more sustained. We hypothesize that hypoxia-
induced ventilatory depression results from activation of a mesencephalic-
pontine "central oxygen detector."
Piglets will be studied. We will identify the region containing the
"central oxygen detector." Hypoxia-induced depressions of ventilation will
be attenuated if neurons of this central oxygen are destroyed. Neuronal
activities of this detector will be characterized. These activities are
hypothesized to increased during depressions of phrenic activity in
hypoxia or during localized hypoxia by applications of sodium cyanide.
We will then examine the role of neurons in the ventral medulla in
hypoxia-induced ventilatory depressions and in the neurogenesis of
gasping. These ventral medullary neuronal activities may provide a
generalized tonic input for ventilatory activity. Yet gasping will not be
altered since the mechanisms underlying the neurogenesis of eupnea and
gasping differ fundamentally.
In unanesthetized piglets, ventilatory activity will be recorded during
wakefulness and sleep. We hypothesize that apneic episodes will be
recorded following ablation of neurons in the medullary gasping center and
those in the ventral medulla.
Our results will have profound implications as to the mechanisms of apnea
and the sudden infant death syndrome. Mechanisms of central apnea may be
elucidated by our studies of the "direct" influence of hypoxia on the
brainstem ventilatory control system, of the role of ventral medullary
mechanisms in this hypoxia-induced depression and the role of medullary
gasping mechanisms in the control of eupnea.
对缺氧的保护反应分为两层。与
项目成果
期刊论文数量(0)
专著数量(0)
科研奖励数量(0)
会议论文数量(0)
专利数量(0)
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Walter St. John其他文献
Walter St. John的其他文献
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