Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2848638 Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology 2006 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

The hypercapnic drive to breathe in amphibians is generally greater than hypoxic ventilatory drive and a variety of interdependent control systems function to regulate both the hypoxic and hypercapnic ventilatory responses. During exposure to hypercapnic conditions, breathing increases in response to input from central chemoreceptors (sensitive to CSF pH/CO2 levels) and peripheral chemoreceptors (sensitive to arterial blood O2 and CO2). On the other hand, olfactory CO2 receptors in the nasal epithelium inhibit breathing during exposure to acute hypercapnia. Further complexity arises from the CO2-sensitive nature of the pulmonary stretch receptors (PSR) which provide both tonic (stimulates lung inflation at low lung volumes; deflation at higher volumes) and phasic (generally excitatory) feedback. This review focuses on interactions between the various populations of chemoreceptors and interactions between chemoreceptors and PSR. Differences between various levels of experimental reduction (i.e., in vitro; in situ; in vivo) are highlighted as are the effects of chronic respiratory challenges on acute hypoxic and hypercapnic chemoreflexes.

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