Opiate slowing of feline respiratory rhythm and effects on putative medullary phase-regulating neurons.
نویسنده
چکیده
Opiates have effects on respiratory neurons that depress tidal volume and air exchange, reduce chest wall compliance, and slow rhythm. The most dose-sensitive opioid effect is slowing of the respiratory rhythm through mechanisms that have not been thoroughly investigated. An in vivo dose-response analysis was performed on medullary respiratory neurons of adult cats to investigate two untested hypotheses related to mechanisms of opioid-mediated rhythm slowing: 1) Opiates suppress intrinsic conductances that limit discharge duration in medullary inspiratory and expiratory neurons, and 2) opiates delay the onset and lengthen the duration of discharges postsynaptically in phase-regulating postinspiratory and late-inspiratory neurons. In anesthetized and unanesthetized decerebrate cats, a threshold dose (3 microg/kg) of the mu-opioid receptor agonist fentanyl slowed respiratory rhythm by prolonging discharges of inspiratory and expiratory bulbospinal neurons. Additional doses (2-4 microg/kg) of fentanyl also lengthened the interburst silent periods in each type of neuron and delayed the rate of membrane depolarization to firing threshold without altering synaptic drive potential amplitude, input resistance, peak action potential frequency, action potential shape, or afterhyperpolarization. Fentanyl also prolonged discharges of postinspiratory and late-inspiratory neurons in doses that slowed the rhythm of inspiratory and expiratory neurons without altering peak membrane depolarization and hyperpolarization, input resistance, or action potential properties. The temporal changes evoked in the tested neurons can explain the slowing of network respiratory rhythm, but the lack of significant, direct opioid-mediated membrane effects suggests that actions emanating from other types of upstream bulbar respiratory neurons account for rhythm slowing.
منابع مشابه
On the opiate trail of respiratory depression.
AGONISTS AT -OPIATE RECEPTORS are very important clinically in the alleviation of pain. A well known and unwanted side effect is the marked depression of breathing that complicates their clinical administration and is potentially life threatening when opiates are abused. Neuronal -opiate receptors are widespread in the ventrolateral medulla including on neurons in the region of the ventral resp...
متن کاملOpioid-Induced Quantal Slowing Reveals Dual Networks for Respiratory Rhythm Generation
Current consensus holds that a single medullary network generates respiratory rhythm in mammals. Pre-Bötzinger Complex inspiratory (I) neurons, isolated in transverse slices, and preinspiratory (pre-I) neurons, found only in more intact en bloc preparations and in vivo, are each proposed as necessary for rhythm generation. Opioids slow I, but not pre-I, neuronal burst periods. In slices, opioid...
متن کاملFunctional imaging reveals respiratory network activity during hypoxic and opioid challenge in the neonate rat tilted sagittal slab preparation.
In mammals, respiration-modulated networks are distributed rostrocaudally in the ventrolateral quadrant of the medulla. Recent studies have established that in neonate rodents, two spatially separate networks along this column-the parafacial respiratory group (pFRG) and the pre-Bötzinger complex (preBötC)-are hypothesized to be sufficient for respiratory rhythm generation, but little is known a...
متن کاملCommentaries on Viewpoint: Initiating inspiration outside the medulla does produce eupneic breathing
TO THE EDITOR: As the title of this Viewpoint (3) states, “Initiating inspiration outside the medulla does produce eupneic breathing.” My view is why should it not? Although many experiments have explored the cortical-spinal pathway to phrenic motoneurons, producing the idea that behavioral and metabolic respiratory demands compete at the spinal respiratory motor neurons (5), there is also evid...
متن کاملPreinspiratory calcium rise in putative pre-Botzinger complex astrocytes.
The neural inspiratory activity originates from a ventrolateral medullary region called the pre-Bötzinger complex (preBötC), yet the mechanism underlying respiratory rhythmogenesis is not completely understood. Recently, the role of not only neurons but astrocytes in the central respiratory control has attracted considerable attention. Here we report our discovery that an intracellular calcium ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
- American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology
دوره 290 5 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2006