Abstract

1. Mechanical stimulation of the naso- and oropharynx causes the replacement of the eupnoeic ventilatory pattern by a brief, but large, burst of activity of the phrenic nerve. Our purpose was to define whether these changes in phrenic activity represent a switch to gasping. 2. In decerebrate, vagotomized, paralysed and ventilated cats, mechanical stimulation of the pharynx was performed during eupnoea, apneusis and gasping. The latter two ventilatory patterns were produced by ventilating the experimental animal with 1.0% carbon monoxide in air or with 100% nitrogen. Eupnoea could be re-established by a recommencement of ventilation with oxygen. 3. The rate of rise of phrenic activity and its peak height were much greater following mechanical stimulation of the pharynx than the phrenic bursts of eupnoea or apneusis. The durations of phrenic burst and the period between these were much less following pharyngeal stimulation. In contrast, these variables of phrenic activity were the same during pharyngeal stimulation and in gasping. 4. Previous studies had established that activity within a region of the lateral tegmental field of medulla is critical for the manifestation of gasping. Hence, electrical stimulation of this region during gasping elicits premature gasps whereas its ablation irreversibly eliminates gasping. 5. We positioned a multibarrelled pipette in the critical medullary region for gasping. Its location was verified, once gasping was established in hypoxia or anoxia, by the elicitation of premature gasps following electrical stimulation. Neurons in this region were destroyed by microinjections of the neurotoxin kainic acid; in a few experiments the region was destroyed by electrolytic lesions. 6. Following destruction of the region of the lateral tegmental field, gasping could no longer be provoked in anoxia. In contrast, the eupnoeic pattern of phrenic activity continued. However, mechanical stimulation of the pharynx no longer caused any changes in the on-going pattern of phrenic activity. 7. We conclude that mechanical stimulation of the pharynx elicits a powerful reflex by which eupnoea is suppressed and gasping is elicited. Stated differently, the changes in phrenic activity during this pharyngeal stimulation in fact represent gasps. 8. Gasps are dependent upon activity within a region of the lateral tegmental field of the medulla. This region plays no role in the neurogenesis of eupnoea. Hence, our results provide additional support for the concept that there are multiple sites for ventilatory neurogenesis in the mammalian brainstem.

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