Abstract

Mammalian ventilation is driven by automatic structures producing "metabolic" ventilation. Respiratory neuroplasticity can adapt this control to developmental, environmental, and disease-related changes. A corticospinal diaphragm pathway accounts for behavioural disruptions of metabolic ventilation. It should be sensitive to use-dependent short-term plasticity. However, the brainstem-generated permanent diaphragm activity could alter the learning-related corticospinal plasticity (metaplasticity). To test this hypothesis, eight healthy volunteers (six women, 21-25) were studied before and after having learnt to produce prominent diaphragm contractions during voluntary inspiratory manoeuvres. Diaphragm training resulted in (1) a decreased liminal stimulation intensities; (2) an increased number of responding sites on the diaphragm mapping with focal stimulation (5.1+/-3.3 versus 9+/-4.4, p=0.004 in relaxed conditions; 8.9+/-5 versus 15.3+/-4.5, p<0.0001, with underlying voluntary facilitation); (3) shortened motor evoked potentials latencies in response to non-focal stimulation (17.2+/-1.6 ms versus 16.2+/-1.4 ms, p=0.03 in relaxed conditions, and 16.8+/-1.1 ms versus 15.2+/-1.6 ms, p=0.003, with facilitation). These results are closely comparable with similar data in locomotor muscle. They provide a neurophysiological basis for the capacity of normal humans to rapidly acquire diaphragmatic skills.

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