Projection of single pulmonary stretch receptors to solitary tract region

1983 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 819-830 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Berger ◽  
D. B. Averill

1. Central projections of single slowly adapting pulmonary stretch receptors were mapped in the medulla by the technique of spike-triggered averaging of extracellular field potentials. Discharge of pulmonary stretch receptors was recorded in continuity from the nodose ganglion; this activity provided the trigger for an averaging computer. 2. These pulmonary stretch receptors were characterized by a linear increase in firing rate in response to increases in transpulmonary pressure, an adaptation index, and peripheral axonal and intramedullary conduction velocities. 3. In accordance with the terminology used by Munson and Sypert (21), three types of electrical potentials were observed for the projection of a pulmonary stretch receptor in the medulla. Axonal potentials were recorded when the brain stem electrode was in the vicinity of the afferent axon. Terminal potentials were recorded when the electrode was adjacent to terminations of the afferent axon. Focal synaptic potentials were recorded when the electrode was near postsynaptic units receiving input from the pulmonary stretch receptor. Maxima of terminal potentials were recorded in a region 1 mm rostral to the obex in the medial nucleus of the tractus solitarius (six cases), in the ventrolateral nucleus of the tractus solitarius (three cases), and in an area just dorsolateral to the tractus solitarius (two cases). Focal synaptic potentials for five pulmonary stretch receptors were observed in a region 1 mm rostral to obex. Maxima of these potentials were recorded in the medial nucleus of tractus solitarius (two cases), in the ventrolateral nucleus of tractus solitarius (two cases), and in an area just dorsolateral to the tractus solitarius (one case). 4. Occasionally both terminal and focal synaptic potentials were observed for the same pulmonary afferent. The difference in the latencies of these potentials fell within the range previously reported for monosynaptic connections of muscle spindle Ia and group II afferents for alpha-motoneurons. This suggests that the afferents of pulmonary stretch receptors have monosynaptic connections with neurons in the medial nucleus of the tractus solitarius, in the ventrolateral nucleus of the tractus solitarius, and in an area dorsolateral to the tractus solitarius.

1986 ◽  
Vol 61 (5) ◽  
pp. 1857-1863 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. W. Davenport ◽  
J. A. Wozniak

Slowly adapting pulmonary stretch receptors have been hypothesized to be the afferents mediating the vagally dependent, volume-related prolongation of expiratory time (TE) during expiratory loading. It has been further suggested that the vagal component of this prolongation of TE is due to the temporal summation of pulmonary stretch receptor (PSR) activity during expiratory loading. This hypothesis was tested in rabbits exposed to resistive and elastic single-breath expiratory loading while PSR′s were simultaneously recorded. Both types of loads resulted in a decreased expired volume (VE) and increased expiratory duration (TE). The TE for resistive loads were significantly greater than for elastic loads for equivalent VE. Thus two different VE-TE relationships were found for resistive and elastic loads. When TE was plotted against the area under the expired volume trajectory, a single linear relationship was observed. PSR activity recorded during expiratory loading increased as VE decreased and TE increased. A single linear relationship resulted when the number of PSR spikes during the expiration was plotted against the associated TE for all types of loads. These findings demonstrate that the volume-related prolongation of TE with single-breath expiratory loads is associated with an increase in PSR discharge. These results support the hypothesis that the vagal component of load-dependent prolongation of TE is a function of both the temporal and spatial summation of PSR activity during the expiratory phase.


1986 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 344-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. I. Pack ◽  
M. D. Ogilvie ◽  
R. O. Davies ◽  
R. J. Galante

Studies were conducted in anesthetized paralyzed dogs to determine how the dynamic and proportional sensitivity of pulmonary stretch receptors change during lung inflation. The firing of each receptor was examined at multiple levels of static transpulmonary pressure and during multiple identical inflations at each of several rates. The averaged response of the receptor was computed and receptor activity related to transpulmonary pressure. On the basis of a quantitative criterion, employed to distinguish type I from type II receptors, the receptors could not be divided into distinct subpopulations. Thus all receptors were treated as coming from a single population. For all receptors we observed that their proportional sensitivity (increases in firing produced by increases in lung expansion at a constant rate of inflation) declined as the lung was inflated. In contrast, the dynamic sensitivity (increases in firing produced by increased rates of inflation at constant transpulmonary pressure) increased or remained relatively constant with increasing lung expansion. Thus, as inflation volume increases, the pulmonary stretch receptor acts increasingly as a rate receptor. The rate of inflation may have a more important role in control of the inspiratory duration than previously realized.


2003 ◽  
Vol 285 (1) ◽  
pp. R215-R221 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael B. Harris ◽  
Walter M. St.-John

The perfused in situ juvenile rat preparation produces phrenic discharge patterns comparable to eupnea and gasping in vivo. These ventilatory patterns of eupnea and gasping differ in multiple aspects, including most prominently the rate of rise of inspiratory activity. Because gasping, but not eupnea, appeared similar after vagotomy in spontaneous breathing preparations, it has been assumed that gasping was unresponsive to afferent stimuli from pulmonary stretch receptors. In the present study, efferent activity of the phrenic nerve was recorded during eupnea and gasping in the in situ juvenile rat preparation. Gasping was induced in hypoxic-hypercapnia or ischemia. An increase in the pressure of tonic lung inflation from 1 to 10 cmH2O caused a prolongation of the duration between phrenic bursts in both eupnea or gasping. Bilateral vagotomy eliminated these changes. We conclude that the neural substrate mediating the Hering-Breuer reflex is retained in the in situ preparation and that the brain stem circuitry generating the respiratory patterns responds to tonic activation of pulmonary stretch receptors in a similar manner in eupnea and gasping. These findings support the homology of eupnea-like phrenic discharge patterns in the reduced in situ preparation and eupnea in vivo and disprove the common supposition that gasping is insensitive to vagal afferent feedback from pulmonary stretch receptor mechanisms.


2005 ◽  
Vol 289 (2) ◽  
pp. R450-R455 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael B. Harris ◽  
Walter M. St.-John

The perfused in situ juvenile rat preparation produces patterns of phrenic discharge comparable to eupnea and gasping in vivo. These ventilatory patterns differ in multiple aspects, including most prominently the rate of rise of inspiratory activity. Although we have recently demonstrated that both eupnea and gasping are similarly modulated by a Hering-Breuer expiratory-promoting reflex to tonic pulmonary stretch, it has generally been assumed that gasping was unresponsive to afferent stimuli from pulmonary stretch receptors. In the present study, we recorded eupneic and gasplike efferent activity of the phrenic nerve in the in situ juvenile rat perfused brain stem preparation, with and without phrenic-triggered phasic pulmonary inflation. We tested the hypothesis that phasic pulmonary inflation produces reflex responses in situ akin to those in vivo and that both eupnea and gasping are similarly modulated by phasic pulmonary stretch. In eupnea, we found that phasic pulmonary inflation decreases inspiratory burst duration and the period of expiration, thus increasing burst frequency of the phrenic neurogram. Phasic pulmonary inflation also decreases the duration of expiration and increases the burst frequency during gasping. Bilateral vagotomy eliminated these changes. We conclude that the neural substrate mediating the Hering-Breuer reflex is retained in the in situ preparation and that the brain stem circuitry generating the respiratory patterns respond to phasic activation of pulmonary stretch receptors in both eupnea and gasping. These findings support the homology of eupneic phrenic discharge patterns in the reduced in situ preparation and eupnea in vivo and disprove the common supposition that gasping is insensitive to vagal afferent feedback from pulmonary stretch receptor mechanisms.


2000 ◽  
Vol 279 (5) ◽  
pp. R1606-R1618 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mislav Tonkovic-Capin ◽  
Edward J. Zuperku ◽  
Eckehard A. Stuth ◽  
Jurica Bajic ◽  
Zoran Dogas ◽  
...  

The purpose of these studies is to better understand the nature of the reflex interactions that control the discharge patterns of caudal medullary, expiratory (E) bulbospinal neurons. We examined the effect of central chemodrive inputs measured as arterial CO2 tension (PaCO2 ) during hyperoxia on the excitatory and inhibitory components of the lung inflation responses of these neurons in thiopental sodium-anesthetized, paralyzed dogs. Data from slow ramp inflation and deflation test patterns, which were separated by several control inflation cycles, were used to produce plots of neuronal discharge frequency ( F n) versus transpulmonary pressure (Pt). Pt was used as an index of the activity arising from the slowly adapting pulmonary stretch receptors (PSRs). Changes in inspired CO2 concentrations were used to produce PaCO2 levels that ranged from 20 to 80 mmHg. The data obtained from 41 E neurons were used to derive an empirical model that quantifies the average relationship for F n versus both Pt and PaCO2 . This model can be used to predict the time course and magnitude of E neuronal responses to these inputs. These data suggest that the interaction between PaCO2 and PSR-mediated excitation and inhibition of F n is mainly additive, but synergism between PaCO2 and excitatory inputs is also present. The implications of these findings are discussed.


1994 ◽  
Vol 76 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. P. Lee ◽  
H. F. Chen ◽  
F. C. Hsu ◽  
T. B. Kuo ◽  
M. H. Yang

Pulmonary air embolism (PAE) usually causes small-airway collapse. Local transpulmonary pressure (Ptr) is thought to be closely associated with the activity of slowly adapting pulmonary stretch receptors (SAPSRs). To test whether discharge of SAPSRs located distal to collapsed airways is closely related to the overall Ptr, we studied 65 SAPSRs in anesthetized paralyzed open-chest dogs that were ventilated at constant tidal volume and frequency. PAE increased both Ptr and total pulmonary resistance but decreased dynamic lung compliance. Three groups of SAPSRs were identified on the basis of their locations in intrapulmonary airways. Group I had 29 SAPSRs located in airways < 1 mm in diameter. Group II had 10 SAPSRs that were found in intrapulmonary airways between 1 and 2 mm in diameter. PAE decreased the activity of 31 of the 39 SAPSRs in these two groups. Their activity during PAE was not related to Ptr. The 26 SAPSRs in group III were in airways > 2 mm in diameter. PAE increased the peak firing rate of 18 of these receptors, and there was a close relationship between the discharge frequency of these SAPSRs and the Ptr during PAE. In groups I and II, the dissociation between Ptr and SAPSR activity during PAE may have been caused by peripheral airway collapse. Activity of central fibers was blocked at higher temperatures than activity of peripheral fibers. We suggest that the response of a SAPSR to PAE depends on the location of the receptor within the lungs, and we speculate that threshold and fiber type are also related to location.


1986 ◽  
Vol 60 (6) ◽  
pp. 2048-2055 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. F. Green ◽  
E. R. Schertel ◽  
H. M. Coleridge ◽  
J. C. Coleridge

We recorded pulmonary stretch receptor (PSR) activity in anesthetized dogs and examined the effect of varying pulmonary arterial PCO2 (PpCO2) in both the naturally perfused and vascularly isolated pulmonary circulations while ventilating the lungs with room air. Steady-state increases in PpCO2 from approximately 25 to 50 Torr and from 50 to 70 Torr decreased PSR activity (impulses/ventilatory cycle) by 15 and 9%, respectively (P less than 0.001). Rapid increases in PpCO2 from approximately 50 to 80 Torr in a right-heart bypass preparation (with pulmonary blood flow constant) decreased PSR activity by 27%. Depression of firing, which was proportionately greater in deflation, was not dependent on changes in lung mechanics. Results show that loading CO2 intravascularly depresses PSR activity, the effects extending above as well as below resting PpCO2. Rapidly increasing PpCO2 above the resting level markedly depresses PSR activity during the transient. We conclude that PSRs may contribute to altered breathing resulting from changes in mixed venous PCO2 over the physiological range.


1982 ◽  
Vol 53 (2) ◽  
pp. 346-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Iscoe

The discharge properties of pulmonary stretch receptors (PSR) were studied in spontaneously breathing, pentobarbital sodium-anesthetized cats. During eupneic breathing, 105 of 116 PSR (both tonically and phasically active) were recruited in the first third of inspiration; none were recruited in the last third. Linear equations adequately expressed the relation between instantaneous discharge frequency and inspired volume in eupnea. During CO2 rebreathing, both tidal volume and peak PSR discharge frequency were inversely related to inspiratory duration. At fixed volumes less than 40 ml above functional residual capacity, instantaneous PSR discharge frequency either did not change or decreased with increases in flow. Above 40 ml, increases in discharge frequency accompanied increases in flow (0.033 spikes/s per ml/s). During progressive hypocapnic hypoxia, discharge frequency increased, on average, at all volumes with increases in flow (0.206 spikes/s per ml/s). During both conditions, as with eupnea, increases in frequency were linearly related to increments in tidal volume. Therefore, tidal volume alone can be used to estimate PSR feedback to the respiratory centers, provided that its instantaneous value is appropriately scaled to account for the different effects of CO2 and hypocapnic hypoxia on PSR discharge.


1991 ◽  
Vol 71 (2) ◽  
pp. 425-431 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Yu ◽  
T. E. Pisarri ◽  
J. C. Coleridge ◽  
H. M. Coleridge

We examined the steady-state response of slowly adapting pulmonary stretch receptors (SAPSRs) to reduced lung compliance in open-chest cats with lungs ventilated at eupneic rate and tidal volume (VT) and with a positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of 3–4 cmH2O. Transient removal of PEEP decreased compliance by approximately 30% and increased transpulmonary pressure (Ptp) by 1–2.5 cmH2O. Reduction of compliance significantly decreased SAPSR discharge in deflation and caused a small increase in discharge at the peak of inflation; it had little effect on discharge averaged over the ventilatory cycle. Increasing VT to produce a comparable increase in Ptp significantly increased peak discharge. Thus unlike rapidly adapting receptors, whose discharge is increased more effectively by reduced compliance than by increased VT, SAPSRs are stimulated by increased VT but not by reduced compliance. We speculate that the most consistent effect of reduced compliance on SAPSRs (the decrease in deflation discharge) was due to the decreased time constant for deflation in the stiffer lung. This alteration in firing may contribute to the tachypnea evoked as the lungs become stiffer.


1981 ◽  
Vol 59 (9) ◽  
pp. 1017-1021 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Gaultier ◽  
J. P. Mortola

The apnea following lung inflation (Hering–Breuer expiratory promoting reflex) is a vagally mediated reflex which is initiated by the activation of pulmonary stretch receptors (PSR) and terminated by the interaction of several factors, which include adaptation of PSR, chemical stimuli, level of anaesthesia, and body temperature. Since PSR activity is determined by the changes in airway tension, the interpretation of the strength of vagal reflexes on the basis of changes in lung volume rather than transpulmonary pressure can be misleading when the mechanical properties of the respiratory system are not constant. In this study we compared the reflex apnea resulting from lung inflation of young and adult mammals, the respiratory system of which have very different mechanical properties. If the response is compared on the basis of similar changes in lung volume, it can be considered weaker or stronger in the young depending upon the normalizing parameter used. However, when considered on the basis of the relative changes in transpulmonary pressure, which better reflects the activation of PSR, the reflex is weaker in young rats and rabbits than in their adult counterparts and similar in dogs. The analysis of the underlying mechanisms suggests a weaker vagal contribution in the young animal, but a satisfactory conclusion requires a better knowledge of the factors which, in the younger animals, result in the termination of the apnea.


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