Abstract

We describe a method to assess the effects of P CO2, around and below eucapnia, on the neuromuscular ventilatory response to a standard peripheral chemoreceptor stimulus. Subjects were “passively” hyperventilated (without respiratory muscle activity), at a constant level of ventilation. Stimuli (3–7 breaths N 2) were delivered over a range of steady-state Pet CO 2 (25–43 mmHg). Stimuli during hypocapnia were coupled with a transient increase in FI CO2 so that the stimulus to the peripheral chemoreceptors was always “hypoxia at eucapnia”. Responses to the stimuli (quantified from the reduction in peak inflation pressure and the magnitude of the evoked diaphragm electromyographic activity) decreased in a graded manner as steady-state Pet CO 2 fell, disappearing at 7.5 mmHg below eucapnia. Carotid body chemoreceptor recordings from two anaesthetised cats, indicated that the peak firing rate during such stimuli was independent of steady-state P CO 2 . The results suggest that the central sensitivity to a peripheral chemoreceptor input may be modulated by changes in steady-state P CO 2 around eucapnia and during mild hypocapnia.

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