Abstract

Event-related potentials were recorded to brief presentations of four levels of inspiratory flow-resistive loads in young adults. We labeled the loads according to the level of resistance they provided subjectively: sub-threshold (0.34 cmH 2O/l per s), near-threshold (4.01 cmH 2O/l per s), intermediate (10.4 cmH 2O/l per s), and near-occlusion (57.5 cmH 2O/l per s). No discernible ERPs were elicited by the undetected, sub-threshold stimulus but late components of the ERP (P2, N2, and P3) were observed to each of the three larger stimuli. They were related, in part, to behavioral judgments obtained during the stimulus periods. Both the latency and amplitude of the ERP components varied systematically as a function of stimulus magnitude, in a manner comparable to that observed in ERP paradigms using auditory and visual stimuli. Thus, the data show that event-related potentials to breathing are sensitive to physiologic effects of resistive loads present at the onset of inspiration. Respiratory ERPs may be used to infer sensory and perceptual responses to increases in airflow resistance and, accordingly, may relate to the perception of airflow obstruction in patient populations.

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