We tested the hypothesis that unanesthetized rats exhibit ventilatory long-term facilitation (LTF) after intermittent, but not continuous, hypoxia. Minute ventilation (VE) and carbon dioxide production (VCO(2)) were measured in unanesthetized, unrestrained male Sprague-Dawley rats via barometric plethysmography before, during, and after exposure to continuous or intermittent hypoxia. Hypoxia was either isocapnic [inspired O(2) fraction (FI(O(2))) = 0.08--0.09 and inspired CO(2) fraction (FI(CO(2))) = 0.04] or poikilocapnic (FI(O(2)) = 0.11 and FI(CO(2)) = 0.00). Sixty minutes after intermittent hypoxia, VE or VE/VCO(2) was significantly greater than baseline in both isocapnic and poikilocapnic conditions. In contrast, 60 min after continuous hypoxia, VE and VE/VCO(2) were not significantly different from baseline values. These data demonstrate ventilatory LTF after intermittent hypoxia in unanesthetized rats. Ventilatory LTF appeared similar in its magnitude (after accounting for CO(2) feedback), time course, and dependence on intermittent hypoxia to phrenic LTF previously observed in anesthetized, vagotomized, paralyzed rats.
1. This study was designed to test the hypothesis that perinatal suppression of peripheral arterial chemoreceptor inputs attenuates the hypoxic ventilatory response in adult rats. Perinatal suppression of peripheral chemoreceptor activity was achieved by exposing rats to hyperoxia throughout the first month of life. 2. Late-gestation pregnant rats were housed in a 60% 02 environment, exposing the pups to hyperoxia from several days prior to birth until they were returned to normoxia on postnatal day 28. These perinatally treated rats were then reared to adulthood (3-5 months old) in normoxia. In addition to the mother rats, adult male rats were also exposed to hyperoxia, creating an adult-treated control group. Two to four months after the hyperoxic exposure, treated rats were compared with untreated male rats of similar age. 3. A whole-body, flow-through plethysmograph was used to measure hypoxic and hypercapnic ventilatory responses of the unanaesthetized adult rats. In moderate hypoxia (arterial oxygen partial pressure, Pa02 -48 mmHg), VE (minute ventilation) and the ratio VE/VGO2(ventilation relative to CO2 production) increased by 16-7 + 4 0 and 35-4 + 3 4%, respectively, in perinatal-treated rats (means + S.E.M.), but increased more in untreated control rats (51-4 + 2-8 and 83-1 + 4.3%; both P < 10-6).4. In contrast to the impaired hypoxic ventilatory response, ventilatory responses to hypercapnia (5 % C02) were similar between untreated control and perinatal-treated rats. 5. Impaired hypoxic responsiveness was unique to the perinatal-treated rats since hypoxic ventilatory responses were not attenuated in adult-treated rats. 6. The results indicate that ventilatory responses to hypoxaemia are greatly attenuated in adult rats that had experienced hyperoxia during their first month of life, and suggest that normal hypoxic ventilatory control mechanisms are susceptible to developmental plasticity.
To define the role of environmental oxygen in regulating postnatal maturation of the carotid body afferent pathway, light and electron microscopic methods were used to compare chemoafferent neurone survival and carotid body development in newborn rats reared from birth in normoxia (21 % O2) or chronic hyperoxia (60 % O2). Four weeks of chronic hyperoxia resulted in a significant 41 % decrease in the number of unmyelinated axons in the carotid sinus nerve, compared with age‐matched normoxic controls. In contrast, the number of myelinated axons was unaffected by hyperoxic exposure. Chemoafferent neurones, located in the glossopharyngeal petrosal ganglion, already exhibited degenerative changes following 1 week of hyperoxia from birth, indicating that even a relatively short hyperoxic exposure was sufficient to derange normal chemoafferent development. In contrast, no such changes were observed in the vagal nodose ganglion, demonstrating that the effect of high oxygen levels was specific to sensory neurones in the carotid body afferent pathway. Moreover, petrosal ganglion neurones were sensitive to hyperoxic exposure only during the early postnatal period. Chemoafferent degeneration in chronically hyperoxic animals was accompanied by marked hypoplasia of the carotid body. In view of previous findings from our laboratory that chemoafferent neurones require trophic support from the carotid body for survival after birth, we propose that chemoafferent degeneration following chronic hyperoxia is due specifically to the loss of target tissue in the carotid body.
Hypoxic ventilatory and phrenic responses are reduced in adult rats (3-5 months old) exposed to hyperoxia for the first month of life (hyperoxia treated). We previously reported that hypoxic phrenic responses were normal in a small sample of 14-to 15-month-old hyperoxia-treated rats, suggesting slow, spontaneous recovery. Subsequent attempts to identify the mechanism(s) underlying this spontaneous recovery of hypoxic phrenic responses led us to re-evaluate our earlier conclusion. Experiments were conducted in two groups of aged Sprague-Dawley rats (14-15 months old) which were anaesthetized, vagotomized, neuromuscularly blocked and ventilated: (1) a hyperoxia-treated group raised in 60 % O 2 for the first 28 postnatal days; and (2) an age-matched control group raised in normoxia. Increases in minute phrenic activity and integrated phrenic nerve amplitude (ıPhr) during isocapnic hypoxia (arterial partial pressures of O 2 , 60, 50 and 40 ± 1 mmHg) were greater in aged control (n = 15) than hyperoxia-treated rats (n = 11; P ≤ 0.01). Phrenic burst frequency during hypoxia was not different between groups. To examine the central integration of carotid chemoafferent inputs, steady-state relationships between carotid sinus nerve (electrical) stimulation frequency and phrenic nerve activity were compared in aged control (n = 7) and hyperoxia-treated rats (n = 7). Minute phrenic activity, ıPhr and burst frequency were not different between groups at any stimulation frequency between 0.5 and 20 Hz. Carotid body chemoreceptor function was examined by recording whole carotid sinus nerve responses to cessation of ventilation or injection of cyanide in aged control and hyperoxia-treated rats. Electrical activity of the carotid sinus nerve did not change in five out of five hyperoxia-treated rats in response to stimuli that evoked robust increases in carotid sinus nerve activity in five out of five control rats. Estimates of carotid body volume were lower in aged hyperoxia-treated rats (4.4 (± 0.2) w 10 6 mm 3 ) compared to controls (17.4 (± 1.6) w 10 6 mm 3 ; P <0.01). We conclude that exposure to hyperoxia for the first month of life causes life-long impairment of carotid chemoreceptor function and, consequently, blunted phrenic responses to hypoxia.
The role of carotid body chemoreceptors in ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia, i.e., the progressive, time-dependent increase in ventilation during the first several hours or days of hypoxic exposure, is not well understood. The purpose of this investigation was to characterize the effects of acute and prolonged (up to 4 h) hypoxia on carotid body chemoreceptor discharge frequency in anesthetized goats. The goat was chosen for study because of its well-documented and rapid acclimatization to hypoxia. The response of the goat carotid body to acute progressive isocapnic hypoxia was similar to other species, i.e., a hyperbolic increase in discharge as arterial PO2 (PaO2) decreased. The response of 35 single chemoreceptor fibers to an isocapnic [arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) 38-40 Torr)] decrease in PaO2 of from 100 +/- 1.7 to 40.7 +/- 0.5 (SE) Torr was an increase in mean discharge frequency from 1.7 +/- 0.2 to 5.8 +/- 0.4 impulses. During sustained isocapnic steady-state hypoxia (PaO2 39.8 +/- 0.5 Torr, PaCO2, 38.4 +/- 0.4 Torr) chemoreceptor afferent discharge frequency remained constant for the first hour of hypoxic exposure. Thereafter, single-fiber chemoreceptor afferents exhibited a progressive, time-related increase in discharge (1.3 +/- 0.2 impulses.s-1.h-1, P less than 0.01) during sustained hypoxia of up to 4-h duration. These data suggest that increased carotid chemoreceptor activity contributes to ventilatory acclimatization to hypoxia.
We determined the effects of carotid body excision (CBX) on eupneic ventilation and the ventilatory responses to acute hypoxia, hyperoxia, and chronic hypoxia in unanesthetized rats. Arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) and calculated minute alveolar ventilation to minute metabolic CO2 production (VA/VCO2) ratio were used to determine the ventilatory responses. The effects of CBX and sham operation were compared with intact controls (PaCO2 = 40.0 +/- 0.1 Torr, mean +/- 95% confidence limits, and VA/VCO2 = 21.6 +/- 0.1). CBX rats showed 1) chronic hypoventilation with respiratory acidosis, which was maintained for at least 75 days after surgery (PaCO2 = 48.4 +/- 1.1 Torr and VA/VCO2 = 17.9 +/- 0.4), 2) hyperventilation in response to acute hyperoxia vs. hypoventilation in intact rats, 3) an attenuated increase in VA/VCO2 in acute hypoxemia (arterial PO2 approximately equal to 49 Torr), which was 31% of the 8.7 +/- 0.3 increase in VA/VCO2 observed in control rats, 4) no ventilatory acclimatization between 1 and 24 h hypoxia, whereas intact rats had a further 7.5 +/- 1.5 increase in VA/VCO2, 5) a decreased PaCO2 upon acute restoration of normoxia after 24 h hypoxia in contrast to an increased PaCO2 in controls. We conclude that in rats carotid body chemoreceptors are essential to maintain normal eupneic ventilation and to the process of ventilatory acclimatization to chronic hypoxia.
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