Abstract

Infants born very prematurely (<28 weeks gestation) have immature lungs and often require supplemental oxygen. However, long‐term hyperoxia exposure can arrest lung development leading to bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), which increases acute and long‐term respiratory morbidity and mortality. The neural mechanisms controlling breathing are highly plastic during development. Whether the ventilatory control system adapts to pulmonary disease associated with hyperoxia exposure in infancy remains unclear. Here, we tested the hypothesis that there would be age‐dependent adaptations in the control of breathing in an established rat model of hyperoxia‐induced BPD. Hyperoxia exposure (FIO2: 0.9 from 0–10 days of life) led to a BPD‐like lung phenotype, including sustained reductions in alveolar surface area and counts, and modest increases in airway resistance. Hyperoxia exposure also led to chronic increases in room air and acute hypoxic minute ventilation (VE) and age‐dependent changes in breath‐to‐breath tidal volume and breathing frequency variability. Hyperoxia‐exposed rats had normal hypoxic ventilatory responses, oxygen saturation (SpO2) in room air, but greater reductions in SpO2 during acute hypoxia (12% O2) indicating reduced hypoxic sensitivity and/or hypoventilation due to diseased lungs. However, VE was increased indicating an increase in respiratory drive. Perinatal hyperoxia led to greater glial fibrillary acidic protein expression and an increase in neuron counts within 6 of 8 and 1 of 8 key brainstem regions controlling breathing, respectively, suggesting astrocytic expansion. In conclusion, perinatal hyperoxia in rats induced a BPD‐like phenotype and age‐dependent adaptations in VE that may be mediated through changes to the neural architecture of the ventilatory control system. Our results suggest chronically altered ventilatory control in BPD.Support or Funding InformationChildren's Research Hospital of Wisconsin Research Institute, NIH R01 HL 122358, & Parker B. Francis FoundationThis abstract is from the Experimental Biology 2019 Meeting. There is no full text article associated with this abstract published in The FASEB Journal.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call