Abstract

We studied the action of the costal and crural (vertebral) parts of the diaphragm on the lower rib cage in normal supine dogs. The two parts of the diaphragm were separately stimulated by electrodes directly implanted in the muscle or via the different phrenic nerve roots in the neck. The results of the experiments indicate the following. 1) The costal and crural parts of the diaphragm have a different segmental innervation and a different mechanical action on the rib cage. 2) The costal diaphragm expands the lower rib cage when it contracts. This rib-cage expansion is due mostly to the fulcrum of the abdominal contents and partly to the rise in abdominal pressure that takes place during diaphragmatic contraction. The pericardial attachments play no role in this action of the diaphragm. 3) The action of the crural diaphragm on the lower rib cage depends only on the balance between the inspiratory force exerted by the rise in abdominal pressure and the expiratory force exerted by the fall in pleural pressure. In the intact animal at functional residual capacity, these two opposite effects cancel each other. 4) The inflationary action of both parts on the rib cage decreases progressively as lung volume increases. The findings also suggest that the rise in abdominal pressure which occurs when the diaphragm contracts expands the lower rib cage by acting through the area of apposition of the diaphragm to the rib cage. These findings also strengthen the idea that the diaphragm actually consists of two muscles.

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