Either excitatory or inhibitory cardio-respiratory responses induced by nicotine have been reported. We evaluated the joint and separate contributions of peripheral arterial chemoreceptors and pulmonary vagal afferences to nicotine-induced cardio-respiratory responses in 11 pentobarbitone-anaesthetized cats. Nicotine, given i.v. in doses of from 1 to 200 microg/kg, evoked dose-dependent transient increases in tidal volume (VT) and arterial blood pressure (BP), but the highest doses evoked brief apnoea, immediately followed by intense hyperventilation, as well as discrete early hypotension followed by late hypertension. Bilateral section of the aortic and carotid nerves abolished all hyperventilatory responses to nicotine, giving way to apnoea followed by few cycles of reduced VT and profound hypotension followed by slight hypertension in response to intermediate doses (50-100 microg/kg). Subsequent bilateral vagotomy (BV) suppressed apnoeic and hypotensive responses. In other cats initially subjected to BV, only increases in VT and BP were observed in response to nicotine, effects which were no longer observed after additional carotid and aortic deafferentation. These data suggest that excitatory effects of nicotine on respiration and BP are reflexes evoked by stimulation of peripheral arterial chemoreceptors, while inhibitory effects are also reflex responses but evoked from stimulation of pulmonary vagal afferences.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s1569-9048(02)00185-4 | DOI Listing |
BMC Public Health
December 2024
School of Exercise and Health, Shanghai University of Sport, Yangpu District Qingyuan Huan Road 650, Shanghai, 200438, China.
Background: Air pollution (AP) has become a substantial environmental issue affecting human cardiorespiratory health. Physical exercise (PE) is widely accepted to promote cardiorespiratory health. There is a paucity of research on the point at which the level of polluted environment engaged in PE could be used as a preventive approach to compensate for the damages of AP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFResuscitation
January 2025
Department of Pediatrics, POB 8100 4068, Stavanger, Norway, Stavanger University Hospital and University of Stavanger; Department of Anaesthesiology & Intensive Care, Stavanger University Hospital, POB 8100 4068, Stavanger, Norway. Electronic address:
Background: The impact and/or significance of gasping or apnea on cardio-respiratory status at birth remains unclear.
Objectives: The study objectives were to determine in infants presenting with gasping or apnea in the delivery room, initial heart rate (HR), responses to positive pressure ventilation (PPV), time to onset of spontaneous respirations, and the relationship of these responses to 24-hour outcome (death/survival) METHODS: Observation study undertaken in a rural setting involving late preterm and term newborns who gasped (n=126) or were apneic (n=105) at birth and received PPV had HR and respiratory parameters continuously measured and were video recorded.
Results: Apneic (12.
Br Med Bull
December 2024
Research Institute of Sports and Exercise Science, Cardiovascular Health Science Research Group, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, Tom Reilly Building, L3 3AF, United Kingdom.
Introduction: The complex phenomenon of the athlete's heart (AH) describes the chronic physiological structural and functional adaptation secondary to repeated exposure of an acute exercise stimulus.
Sources Of Data: This narrative review is based on published evidence.
Areas Of Agreement: Highly trained athletic individuals frequently display cardiac parameters which are suggestive of an AH and can exceed the traditional 'normal' limits.
IEEE Trans Biomed Eng
October 2024
Objective: Preterm infants are particularly exposed to severe cardio-respiratory events, associating apnea with bradycardia and oxygen desaturation. A patient-specific and event-specific model-based approach is proposed in this work to analyze the acute heart rate response to apnea-bradycardia events in preterm newborn.
Methods: A novel model integrating the main cardio-respiratory interactions which are specific to the neonatal period is proposed.
Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol
December 2024
Division of Otolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery, S.Chiara Hospital, Trento, Italy.
Purposes: To evaluate whether mandibular advancement device therapy is recommended in patients affected by obstructive sleep apnea.
Methods: In order to predict oral appliances therapy response, drug induced sleep endoscopy with cardio-respiratory polygraphy and mandibular advancement device simulator was carried out. Patients in which upper airway obstruction was resolved on all levels and AHI was normalized (< 5/h), were referred for oral appliance therapy.
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