Abstract

We have used the isolated brainstem-spinal cord preparation of the neonatal rat to study the effects of theophylline on the ventilatory response to hypoxia. The brainstem-spinal cord was isolated from neonatal rats (0–4 days) and superfused with mock cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), equilibrated with a gas mixture (F O 2 , 0.90; F CO 2 , 0.02; F N 2 , 0.08; control CSF) at 27°C. We recorded phrenic nerve discharge from C4 roots, using suction electrodes, and measured respiratory frequency ( fR) and the amplitude of the integrated phrenic neurogram (∫ phr). We examined how theophylline and the specific adenosine antagonist, 8-p-sulfophenyltheophylline (SPT), modify the ventilatory response to hypoxia. The response during superfusion with hypoxic CSF (F O 2 , 0.06) consisted of a marked decrease in fR (to 60% of control) and a slight decline in ∫ phr (to 85% of control). By contrast, in the presence of theophylline (30 mg/L = 165 μM) and SPT (5 mg/L = 15 μM) in the superfusate hypoxia reduced fR only moderately (to 87% of control) and exerted virtually no effect on ∫ phr (105% of control). Theophylline and SPT attenuated the rate of decrease in fR and completely blocked the decrease in ∫ phr. There was no difference between the effects of theophylline and those of SPT. The results suggest that theophylline attenuates hypoxic respiratory depression, and that this effect is mediated by the blockade of adenosine.

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