Lower brainstem P(CO2) increased the responsiveness of the peripheral chemoreflex to carotid body stimuli, demonstrating a negative interaction between brainstem and peripheral chemosensitivity.
Demonstrates a negative interaction between brainstem and peripheral chemosensitivity in rats, suggesting current models assuming simple addition between chemoreceptor inputs should be reconsidered.
Interaction between central (brainstem) and peripheral (carotid body) respiratory chemosensitivity is vital to protect blood gases against potentially deleterious fluctuations, especially during sleep. Previously, using an in situ arterially perfused, vagotomized, decerebrate preparation in which brainstem and peripheral chemoreceptors are perfused separately (i.e. dual perfused preparation; DPP), we observed that the phrenic response to specific carotid body hypoxia was larger when the brainstem was held at 25 Torr P(CO(2)) compared to 50 Torr P(CO(2)). This suggests a negative (i.e. hypo-additive) interaction between chemoreceptors. The current study was designed to (a) determine whether this observation could be generalized to all carotid body stimuli, and (b) exclude the possibility that the hypo-additive response was the simple consequence of ventilatory saturation at high brainstem P(CO(2)). Specifically, we tested how steady-state brainstem P(CO(2)) modulates peripheral chemoreflex magnitude in response to carotid body P(CO(2)) and P(O(2)) perturbations, both above and below eupnoeic levels. We found that the peripheral chemoreflex was more responsive the lower the brainstem P(CO(2)) regardless of whether the peripheral chemoreceptors received stimuli which increased or decreased activation. These findings demonstrate a negative interaction between brainstem and peripheral chemosensitivity in the rat in the absence of ventilatory saturation. We suggest that a negative interaction in humans may contribute to increased controller gain associated with sleep-related breathing disorders and propose that the assumption of simple addition between chemoreceptor inputs used in current models of the respiratory control system be reconsidered.
Day et al. (Mon,) reported a other. Steady-state brainstem P(CO2) modulation vs. High vs low brainstem P(CO2) was evaluated on Peripheral chemoreflex magnitude in response to carotid body P(CO2) and P(O2) perturbations. Lower brainstem P(CO2) increased the responsiveness of the peripheral chemoreflex to carotid body stimuli, demonstrating a negative interaction between brainstem and peripheral chemosensitivity.