Breathing during exercise in dogs - Passive or active?

被引:24
作者
Ainsworth, DM [1 ]
Smith, CA [1 ]
Henderson, KS [1 ]
Dempsey, JA [1 ]
机构
[1] UNIV WISCONSIN,DEPT PREVENT MED,JOHN RANKIN LAB PULM MED,MADISON,WI 53705
关键词
electromyogram; sonomicrometry; locomotion; canine;
D O I
10.1152/jappl.1996.81.2.586
中图分类号
Q4 [生理学];
学科分类号
071003 ;
摘要
The activation patterns of the costal and crural diaphragm and transversus abdominis muscle and their relationship to esophageal pressure (Pes) changes and footplant were examined in five chronically instrumented dogs which breathed at high frequencies at rest and during exercise. In two tracheostomized dogs, measurements were made of diaphragmatic length via sonomicrometry and of airflow and were related to diaphragmatic electrical activity and Pes. Dogs exhibited either a high-frequency breathing pattern, characterized by Pes changes occurring at 2-6 Hz, or a mixed-frequency breathing pattern, characterized by low-amplitude Pes oscillations (4-6 Hz) superimposed on a slower breathing rate of 0.5-1 Hz. Regardless of the type of breathing pattern elected or of the various breathing-to-stride frequency ratios observed during exercise, decreases in Pes were always associated with phasic electromyograhic activity of the costal and crural diaphragm and with phasic diaphragmatic muscle shortening. The transversus abdominis electromyographic activity coincided with an increasing Pes from peak negative values in resting dogs and exhibited both an expiratory and a locomotory modulation during exercise. Although footplant may have contributed to some airflow generation when dogs utilized the mixed-frequency pattern, these data demonstrate that the movement of air into and out of the lungs in stationary or exercising dogs requires phasic neural activation of the diaphragm and other respiratory muscles.
引用
收藏
页码:586 / 595
页数:10
相关论文
共 18 条
[1]   VAGAL CONTRIBUTIONS TO RESPIRATORY MUSCLE-ACTIVITY DURING EUPNEA IN THE AWAKE DOG [J].
AINSWORTH, DM ;
SMITH, CA ;
JOHNSON, BD ;
EICKER, SW ;
HENDERSON, KS ;
DEMPSEY, JA .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1992, 72 (04) :1355-1361
[2]   THE EFFECTS OF LOCOMOTION ON RESPIRATORY MUSCLE-ACTIVITY IN THE AWAKE DOG [J].
AINSWORTH, DM ;
SMITH, CA ;
EICKER, SW ;
HENDERSON, KS ;
DEMPSEY, JA .
RESPIRATION PHYSIOLOGY, 1989, 78 (02) :145-162
[3]  
AINSWORTH DM, 1995, AM J RESP CRIT CARE, V151, P805
[4]  
[Anonymous], MILLERS ANATOMY DOG
[5]   TIME RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE RESPIRATORY CYCLE AND LIMB CYCLE IN THE HORSE [J].
ATTENBURROW, DP .
EQUINE VETERINARY JOURNAL, 1982, 14 (01) :69-72
[6]   LOCOMOTION IN MEN HAS NO APPRECIABLE MECHANICAL EFFECT ON BREATHING [J].
BANZETT, RB ;
MEAD, J ;
REID, MB ;
TOPULOS, GP .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1992, 72 (05) :1922-1926
[7]  
BAYDUR A, 1982, AM REV RESPIR DIS, V126, P788
[8]   RUNNING AND BREATHING IN MAMMALS [J].
BRAMBLE, DM ;
CARRIER, DR .
SCIENCE, 1983, 219 (4582) :251-256
[9]   MAMMALIAN LOCOMOTOR-RESPIRATORY INTEGRATION - IMPLICATIONS FOR DIAPHRAGMATIC AND PULMONARY DESIGN [J].
BRAMBLE, DM ;
JENKINS, FA .
SCIENCE, 1993, 262 (5131) :235-240
[10]  
BRAMBLE DM, 1989, AM ZOOL, V29, P171