Abstract
Chronic hyperoxia during early postnatal development depresses breathing when neonatal rats are returned to room air and causes long-lasting attenuation of the hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR). In contrast, little is known about the control of breathing of juvenile or adult mammals after chronic exposure to moderate hyperoxia later in life. Therefore, Sprague-Dawley rats were exposed to 60% O2 for 7 days (juveniles) or for 4 and 14 days (adults) and ventilation was measured by whole-body plethysmography immediately after the exposure or following a longer period of recovery in room air. Hyperoxia-treated juvenile rats appeared to hypoventilate when returned to room air (11-13% lower ventilation and CO2 convection requirement relative to age-matched controls), but chronic hyperoxia did not alter normoxic ventilation in adult rats. In contrast, pre-treatment with chronic hyperoxia augmented the HVR in both juvenile rats (+41%) and adult rats (+28-50%). The hypercapnic ventilatory response (7% CO2) also tended to be augmented in adult rats after 14 days of hyperoxia, but this effect was not significant after accounting for variation in metabolic rate (i.e, CO2 convection requirement). These findings confirm that chronic hyperoxia elicits age-specific respiratory plasticity in rats. These age-dependent differences are not caused by a lack of plasticity in adult-exposed rats; rather, there are qualitative differences in the plasticity that is expressed after chronic hyperoxia in neonates, juveniles, and adults as well as differences in its persistence.
Published Version
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