A New Aspect of the Carotid Body Function Controlling Hypoxic Ventilatory Decline in Humans.
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- Published by Japan Society of Physiological Anthropology in Applied Human Science
- Vol. 17 (4), 131-137
- https://doi.org/10.2114/jpa.17.131
Abstract
Ventilatory response to eucapnic sustained mild hypoxia was measured in one patient with unilateral and three patients with bilateral carotid body (CB) resection (defined UR and BR, respectively). The profile of ventilatory response in UR patient was initially augmented then gradually declined (biphasic pattern) as generally seen in normal subjects although the absolute magnitude was substantially low. On the other hand, biphasic pattern was disappeared in all three BRs. Lack of hypoxic ventilatory decline (HVD) in the late period of sustained hypoxia was in marked contrast to that reported in the anaesthetized and CB-denervated animals whose ventilation was severely depressed lower than the pre-hypoxic control level. In view of recent knowledge that the analogous mild hypoxia in normal animals and humans elicits an useful adaptation to economize energy expenditure with maintaining reversible excitability in control of respiration, BR patients were considered to have lost this ability. We conclude that in awake humans the CB not only stimulates ventilation but also controls the degree of subsequent HVD during sustained hypoxia.Keywords
This publication has 32 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ventilatory Depression during Mild Hypoxia in Adult Humans.The Japanese Journal of Physiology, 1995
- Ventilatory effects of prolonged systemic (CNS) hypoxia in awake goatsRespiration Physiology, 1992
- Changes in peripheral chemoreflex sensitivity during sustained, isocapnic hypoxiaRespiration Physiology, 1990
- Hypoxic depression of ventilation in humans: alternative models for the chemoreflexesRespiration Physiology, 1990
- Phrenic nerve responses to hypoxia and CO2 in decerebrate dogsRespiration Physiology, 1986
- Prolonged inhibition of respiration following acute hypoxia in glomectomized catsRespiration Physiology, 1984
- Ventilatory response of decorticate and decerebrate cats to hypoxia and CO2Respiration Physiology, 1977
- Hypoxia-induced tachypnea in carotid-deafferented catsRespiration Physiology, 1975
- Role of the arterial chemoreceptors in ventilatory adaptation to hypoxia of awake dogs and rabbitsRespiration Physiology, 1973
- The Influence of Arterial Hypoxemia upon Labile Phosphates and upon Extracellular and Intracellular Lactate and Pyruvate Concentrations in the Rat BrainScandinavian Journal of Clinical and Laboratory Investigation, 1971