Handb Clin Neurol
August 2022
Breathing can be classified into metabolic and behavioral categories. Metabolic breathing and voluntary behavioral breathing are controlled in the brainstem and in the cerebral motor cortex, respectively. This chapter places special emphasis on the reciprocal influences between breathing and emotional processes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring exercise, tidal volume initially contributes to ventilatory responses more than respiratory frequency, and respiratory frequency then increases rapidly while tidal volume stabilizes. Dyspnea intensity is also known to increase in a threshold-like manner. We tested the possibility that the threshold of tachypneic breathing is equal to that of dyspnea perception during cycle ergometer exercise (n = 27).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEvid Based Complement Alternat Med
June 2015
It remains an open question whether placebo/sham acupuncture, in which the needle tip presses the skin, can be used as a placebo device for research on pain. We compare the analgesic effect of the skin-touch placebo needle with that of the no-touch placebo needle, in which the needle tip does not touch the skin, in a double-blind crossover manner including no-treatment control in 23 healthy volunteers. The subjects received painful electrical stimulation in the forearm before and during needle retention to the LI 4 acupoint and after the removal of the needle and rated pain intensity using a visual analogue scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Whether acupuncture treatment employing multiple penetrating, skin-touch placebo, or no-touch placebo needles designed for double blinding actually do blind practitioners and patients has not been investigated. We aimed to investigate this question.
Subjects: 120 patients with functional neck/shoulder stiffness but in otherwise healthy condition were randomly assigned to a treatment using four penetrating, four skin-touch placebo, or four no-touch placebo needles.
Respir Physiol Neurobiol
April 2015
The precise mechanisms underlying how emotions change breathing patterns remain unclear, but dopamine is a candidate neurotransmitter in the process of emotion-associated breathing. We investigated whether basal dopamine release occurs in the basolateral amygdala (BLA), where sensory-related inputs are received and lead to fear or anxiety responses, and whether D1- and D2-like receptor antagonists affect breathing patterns and dopamine release in the BLA. Adult male mice (C57BL/6N) were perfused with artificial cerebrospinal fluid, a D1-like receptor antagonist (SCH 23390), or a D2-like receptor antagonist ((S)-(-)-sulpiride) through a microdialysis probe in the BLA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRespir Physiol Neurobiol
December 2014
Olfaction is dependent on respiration for the delivery of odorants to the nasal cavity. Taking advantage of the time-locked nature of inspiration and olfactory processing, electroencephalogram dipole modeling (EEG/DT) has previously been used to identify a cascade of inspiration-triggered neural activity moving from primary limbic olfactory regions to frontal cortical areas during odor perception. In this study, we leverage the spatial resolution of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) alongside the temporal resolution of EEG to replicate and extend these findings.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Vibration-induced finger flexion reflex (VFR) is inhibited with acupuncture to TE 5 or LI 4 at the skin innervated by the radial nerve.
Objective: The aim of this study was to determine if acupoints in regions innervated by the radial nerve are specific to inhibit VFR.
Materials And Methods: This experiment was performed using a crossover design with 3 acupuncture groups (needle insertion to the right LU 11, PC 9, or SI 1) and a control group (no needle treatment).
As a result of recent progress in brain imaging techniques, a number of studies have been able to identify anatomical correlates of various emotions (Pujol et al., 2013; Tettamanti et al., 2012; van der Zwaag et al.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThere is some evidence that signals coming from both arms are used to determine the perceived position and movement of one arm. We examined whether the sense of position and movement of one (reference) arm is altered by increases in muscle spindle signals in the other (indicator) arm in blindfolded participants (n = 26). To increase muscle spindle discharge, we applied 70-80 Hz muscle vibration to the elbow flexors of the indicator arm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNo previous report has described whether information regarding an odor used in aromatherapy has placebo effects. We investigated whether placebo analgesia was engendered by verbal information regarding the analgesic effects of an odor. Twelve of 24 subjects were provided with the information that a lavender odor would reduce pain (informed), whereas the other 12 subjects were not (not-informed).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The use of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is a practical intervention to improve oxygenation during anesthetic management; however, the underlying mechanisms have not been elucidated.
Methods: Parameters of ventilator settings and results of arterial blood gas analyses were collected from medical records of adult patients undergoing surgery under general anesthesia with pressure-controlled ventilation in our hospital from January 2009 to March 2010. We analyzed the changes in dynamic compliance (Cdyn) and alveolar-arterial oxygen difference (A-aDo2).
There is evidence that impaired human cognitive abilities are reflected by loss of olfactory abilities. Declining olfactory perception may be a biomarker for impairment of cognitive function and of impending neurogenerative disorders. As olfactory perception may differ between culture and ethnic group, we sought to confirm this relationship with Japanese participants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe anatomical factors involved in upper airway closure of obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) have been established. However, the mechanisms of repetitive OSA are not well understood. We found that dorsomedial medullary 5-HT2 receptor activity is compensated for by hypercapnia and elicits the immediate onset of poikilocapnic hypoxic ventilatory airway responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAutomatic regulation of tidal volume (VT) maintains CO2 homeostasis when spontaneous respiratory rhythm is replaced with a cortically triggered rhythm. We examined whether automatic regulation of respiratory frequency (fR) could maintain CO2 homeostasis at rest if the VT is cortically designated in experiments performed in 21 conscious humans. First, volitionally controlled fR at levels lower than baseline resulted in a larger VT, maintaining end-tidal CO2 fraction constant at eupneic levels.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCorticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) is a neuropeptide that mediates neuroendocrine, autonomic, and behavioral processes associated with the stress response. CRF-containing fibers and receptors are found in various regions of the central nervous system including the spinal cord. Here, we report excitatory effects of CRF on sympathetic preganglionic neurons in the intermediolateral cell column (IML) of in vitro spinal cord preparations from newborn rats.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the influence of false proprioceptive information generated by arm vibration and false visual information provided by a mirror in which subjects saw a reflection of another arm on perception of arm position, in a forearm position-matching task in right-handed subjects (n = 17). The mirror was placed between left and right arms, and arranged so that the reflected left arm appeared to the subjects to be their unseen right (reference) arm. The felt position of the right arm, indicated with a paddle, was influenced by vision of the mirror image of the left arm.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPreviously, we undertook simultaneous recording of ventilation and pulmonary gas exchange in mice and revealed that dopamine D(2) receptors participate in exercise hyperpnoea via behavioural control of ventilation with unchanged pulmonary gas exchange. Here, we examined the hypothesis that D(1) receptors also contribute to exercise hyperpnoea using a D(1) receptor antagonist (SCH 23390; SCH) that crosses the blood-brain barrier, with the same recording technique and protocol as in the previous study. The respiratory responses of mice injected with saline or SCH (50 μg (kg body weight)(-1), i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRespir Physiol Neurobiol
January 2013
We have shown that constant-load treadmill exercise in mice produces an abrupt ventilatory increase to a maximal level at exercise onset. We examined what caused this abrupt response. We measured ventilation during 30-min constant-load exercise on a treadmill, below the lactate threshold, in conscious mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBreathing plays an important role in perception of odors and the experience of emotions. We used the dipole tracing method to analyze brain areas related to odor-induced autobiographical memory and emotions estimated from averaged electroencephalograms triggered by inspiration onset during odor presentation. Odor stimuli were perfumes subjects named that elicited a specific, pleasant and personal memory as well as two pleasant odors for controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn important feature of olfactory perception is its dependence on respiratory activity. By inspiration, olfactory information ascends directly to olfactory-related limbic structures. Therefore, every breath with odor molecules activates these limbic areas associated with emotional experience and memory retrieval.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudies of empathy show that seeing another person in pain, fear or disgust elicits the same brain activations associated with pain, fear or disgust in oneself. Our interest is to know whether respiratory change can be observed in empathy, that is, whether respiration can be altered when observing emotions in others. A discomfort associated with respiration can be breathlessness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe examined two male patients (64 and 70 years old) with rapid eye movement sleep behaviour disorder (RBD) using cognitive tests, myocardial (123)I-metaiodobenzylguanidine (MIBG) scintigraphy, and dopamine positron emission tomography (PET) imaging. One patient had impaired social cognition and decision-making skills and reduced MIBG reuptake, and dopamine PET imaging indicated striatal terminal loss. The other patient had normal social cognition and reduced MIBG reuptake, but no abnormalities were detected by dopamine PET imaging.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDopamine is related to behaviour (including arousal, motivation and motor control of locomotion), and its turnover in the brain is increased during exercise. We examined the hypothesis that dopamine D(2) receptors contribute to exercise hyperpnoea via central neural pathways using the D(2)-like receptor antagonist, raclopride. We simultaneously measured ventilation and pulmonary gas exchange for the first time in mice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRespir Physiol Neurobiol
December 2011
Respiratory rhythm is susceptible to behavioral influences including emotions. Since laboratory dyspnea induces negative emotions, we examined whether tachypneic breathing occurs in relation to perception of dyspnea during CO(2) rebreathing (n=21). Dyspnea intensity scored by a visual analog scale and respiratory frequency started to increase rapidly once the intensity of the stimuli exceeded a threshold for the end-tidal CO(2) fraction.
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