Abstract
Regions within the rostral ventral medullary surface (RVMS) play an important role in cardiorespiratory responses to CO2 during anesthesia. Activity within a RVMS area, in which local cooling elicited marked ventilatory and blood pressure reductions, was measured as 660 nm scattered light changes in 5 goats following 5% CO2 challenges during waking and anesthetic states. During wakefulness, hypercapnia elicited a substantial, short latency transient (1-1.5 min) activity increase, followed by a sustained decrease. Stimulus cessation elicited a large and rapid off-transient activity increase which persisted for ≈20 min. In contrast, during halothane anesthesia, the initial activation was absent, and the later activity decline and off-response were much reduced. We conclude that biphasic RVMS activity responses emerge to CO2 stimulation, and are state-dependent.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 89-92 |
| Number of pages | 4 |
| Journal | Neuroscience Letters |
| Volume | 192 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Jun 9 1995 |
Keywords
- Carbon dioxide
- Neural activity
- Optical imaging
- Respiration
- State
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