{"title":"Inspiratory airway CO2 loading in the pony.","authors":"H W Shirer, J A Orr, J L Loker","doi":"10.1152/jappl.1984.57.4.1097","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>To determine if CO2-sensitive airway receptors are important in the control of breathing, CO2 was preferentially loaded into the respiratory airways in conscious ponies. The technique involved adding small amounts of 100% CO2 to either the latter one-third or latter two-thirds of the inspiratory air in an attempt to raise CO2 concentrations in the airway dead space independent of the arterial blood. Arterial blood gas tensions (PCO2 and PO2) and pH, as well as respiratory output (minute volume, tidal volume, and respiratory rate), were measured in a series of 20 experiments on 5 awake ponies. Elevation of airway CO2 to approximately 12% by addition of CO2 to the latter portion of the inspiratory tidal volume did not alter either ventilation or arterial blood gases. When CO2 was added earlier in the inspiratory phase to fill more of the airway dead space, a small but significant increase in minute volume (2.1 l X min-1 X m-2) and tidal volume (0.1 l X m-2) was accompanied by an increase in arterial PCO2, arterial PO2, and a fall in pH (0.96 Torr, 10.5 Torr, 0.007 units, respectively). A second series of 12 experiments on 6 awake ponies using radiolabeled 14CO2 determined that the increases in breathing were minimal when compared with the large increase that occurred when these animals inhaled 6% 14CO2 (12.7 l X min-1 X m-2). Also, stimulation of systemic arterial or central nervous system chemoreceptors cannot be eliminated from the response since significant amounts of 14CO2 were present in the arterial blood when this marker gas was added to the latter two-thirds of the inspiratory tidal volume. The results, therefore, provide no evidence for CO2-sensitive airway receptors that can increase breathing when stimulated during the latter part of the inspiratory cycle.</p>","PeriodicalId":15258,"journal":{"name":"Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology","volume":"57 4","pages":"1097-103"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1984-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1152/jappl.1984.57.4.1097","citationCount":"6","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of applied physiology: respiratory, environmental and exercise physiology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1984.57.4.1097","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 6
Abstract
To determine if CO2-sensitive airway receptors are important in the control of breathing, CO2 was preferentially loaded into the respiratory airways in conscious ponies. The technique involved adding small amounts of 100% CO2 to either the latter one-third or latter two-thirds of the inspiratory air in an attempt to raise CO2 concentrations in the airway dead space independent of the arterial blood. Arterial blood gas tensions (PCO2 and PO2) and pH, as well as respiratory output (minute volume, tidal volume, and respiratory rate), were measured in a series of 20 experiments on 5 awake ponies. Elevation of airway CO2 to approximately 12% by addition of CO2 to the latter portion of the inspiratory tidal volume did not alter either ventilation or arterial blood gases. When CO2 was added earlier in the inspiratory phase to fill more of the airway dead space, a small but significant increase in minute volume (2.1 l X min-1 X m-2) and tidal volume (0.1 l X m-2) was accompanied by an increase in arterial PCO2, arterial PO2, and a fall in pH (0.96 Torr, 10.5 Torr, 0.007 units, respectively). A second series of 12 experiments on 6 awake ponies using radiolabeled 14CO2 determined that the increases in breathing were minimal when compared with the large increase that occurred when these animals inhaled 6% 14CO2 (12.7 l X min-1 X m-2). Also, stimulation of systemic arterial or central nervous system chemoreceptors cannot be eliminated from the response since significant amounts of 14CO2 were present in the arterial blood when this marker gas was added to the latter two-thirds of the inspiratory tidal volume. The results, therefore, provide no evidence for CO2-sensitive airway receptors that can increase breathing when stimulated during the latter part of the inspiratory cycle.
为了确定二氧化碳敏感的气道受体在控制呼吸中是否重要,我们在有意识的小马中优先将二氧化碳装载到呼吸道中。这项技术包括在吸入空气的后三分之一或后三分之二中加入少量100%的二氧化碳,试图提高独立于动脉血的气道死区中的二氧化碳浓度。在5匹清醒的小马驹上进行了20组实验,测量了动脉血气张力(PCO2和PO2)和pH,以及呼吸输出量(分气量、潮气量和呼吸速率)。通过向吸气潮气量的后半部分添加二氧化碳,将气道二氧化碳升高至约12%,并没有改变通气或动脉血气。当吸气期较早地加入CO2以填充更多的气道死腔时,分钟容积(2.1 l X min-1 X m-2)和潮气量(0.1 l X m-2)虽小但显著增加,但动脉PCO2、动脉PO2升高,pH下降(分别为0.96 Torr、10.5 Torr和0.007单位)。在6匹醒着的小马身上进行的第二组12次实验中,使用放射性标记的14CO2确定,与这些动物吸入6% 14CO2 (12.7 l X min-1 X m-2)时发生的大量增加相比,呼吸的增加是最小的。此外,不能从反应中消除对全身动脉或中枢神经系统化学感受器的刺激,因为当将这种标志气体添加到吸气潮气量的后三分之二时,动脉血中存在大量的14CO2。因此,该结果没有提供证据表明,在吸气周期的后半部分受到刺激时,对二氧化碳敏感的气道受体可以增加呼吸。