Respiratory-modulated and phrenic afferent-driven neurons in the cervical spinal cord (C4–C6) of the fluorocarbon-perfused guinea pig
✍ Scribed by Corey L. Cleland; Peter A. Getting
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 601 KB
- Volume
- 93
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0014-4819
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✦ Synopsis
The potential contributions of cervical spinal interneurons to the neural control of respiration have been investigated by extracellularly recording the patterns of activity of neurons in the C4-C6 spinal cord during fictive respiration in the fluorocarbon-perfused, adult guinea pig. Two types of neurons were recorded: respiratory-modulated neurons, whose activity was modulated with respiration, and phrenic-driven neurons, which were excited by electrical stimulation of the phrenic nerve. Respiratory-modulated neurons (n = 20) could be divided into inspiratory, expiratory, and phase-spanning neurons, based on their patterns of activity during fictive respiration. Respiratory-modulated neurons showed varying dependencies on the type of breathing; during spontaneous augmented breaths, one-half exhibited patterns of activity that were significantly different to those seen during normal, fictive respiration, whereas the other half of the respiratory-modulated neurons showed similar patterns of activity during both normal and augmented breaths. Phrenic-driven neurons (n = 22) could be divided into short-latency (7-12 ms), moderate-latency (12-25 ms), and inhibited neurons, but were only occasionally and weakly modulated with respiration. The results suggest that respiratory-modulated C4-C6 spinal neurons may contribute to the neural control of respiration, with different subpopulations specialized for different types of respiratory tasks, and that phrenic-driven neurons may be interposed in sensory or reflex pathways, such as the spinothalamic tract or phrenic-to-phrenic inhibitory reflex.