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-List Of Titles -Recurrent laryngeal nerve activity exhibits a 5-HT-mediated long-term facilitation and enhanced response to hypoxia following acute intermittent hypoxia in rat

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/173520

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Title
Recurrent laryngeal nerve activity exhibits a 5-HT-mediated long-term facilitation and enhanced response to hypoxia following acute intermittent hypoxia in rat
Related
Journal of applied physiology, Vol. 112, Issue 7, (2012), p.1144-1156
DOI
10.1152/japplphysiol.01356.2011
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Date
2012
Author/Creator
Bautista, Tara G
Author/Creator
Xing, Tao
Author/Creator
Fong, Angelina Y
Author/Creator
Pilowsky, Paul M
Description
A progressive and sustained increase in inspiratory-related motor output ("long-term facilitation") and an augmented ventilatory response to hypoxia occur following acute intermittent hypoxia (AIH). To date, acute plasticity in respiratory motor outputs active in the postinspiratory and expiratory phases has not been studied. The recurrent laryngeal nerve (RLN) innervates laryngeal abductor muscles that widen the glottic aperture during inspiration. Other efferent fibers in the RLN innervate adductor muscles that partially narrow the glottic aperture during postinspiration. The aim of this study was to investigate whether or not AIH elicits a serotonin-mediated long-term facilitation of laryngeal abductor muscles, and if recruitment of adductor muscle activity occurs following AIH. Urethane anesthetized, paralyzed, unilaterally vagotomized, and artificially ventilated adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were subjected to 10 exposures of hypoxia (10% O 2 in N 2, 45 s, separated by 5 min, n = 7). At 60 min post-AIH, phrenic nerve activity and inspiratory RLN activity were elevated (39 ± 11 and 23 ± 6% above baseline, respectively). These responses were abolished by pretreatment with the serotonin-receptor antagonist, methysergide (n = 4). No increase occurred in time control animals (n = 7). Animals that did not exhibit postinspiratory RLN activity at baseline did not show recruitment of this activity post-AIH (n = 6). A repeat hypoxia 60 min after AIH produced a significantly greater peak response in both phrenic and RLN activity, accompanied by a prolonged recovery time that was also prevented by pretreatment with methysergide. We conclude that AIH induces neural plasticity in laryngeal motoneurons, via serotonin-mediated mechanisms similar to that observed in phrenic motoneurons: the so-called "Q-pathway". We also provide evidence that the augmented responsiveness to repeat hypoxia following AIH also involves a serotonergic mechanism.
Description
13 page(s)
Subject Keyword
5-hydroxytryptamine
Subject Keyword
Laryngeal motoneuron
Subject Keyword
Long-term facilitation
Subject Keyword
Methysergide
Subject Keyword
Postinspiratory
Subject Keyword
Serotonin
Resource Type
journal article
Organisation
Macquarie University. Australian School of Advanced Medicine

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/173520
Identifier
ISSN:8750-7587
Identifier
mq_res-ext-2-s2.0-84859567338
Language
eng
Reviewed
Reviewed
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Subject
"Journal of applied physiology"
 
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