AI Article Synopsis

  • Active expiration is primarily driven by the abdominal muscles and rib cage muscles, and their contributions influence diaphragmatic length and subsequent inspiration.
  • In an experiment on anesthetized dogs, increased lung volume and decreased diaphragm length were significantly dampened before vagotomy (nerve cutting), while diaphragmatic activity increased and tidal volume was maintained.
  • After vagotomy, the effectiveness of the expiratory muscles decreased, leading to a shortened diaphragm and failure to restore tidal volume despite increased activity in other respiratory muscles.

Article Abstract

Active expiration is produced by the abdominal muscles and the rib cage expiratory muscles. We hypothesized that the relative contribution of these two groups to expiration would affect diaphragmatic length and, hence, influence the subsequent inspiration. To address this question we measured the respiratory muscle response to expiratory threshold loading in spontaneously breathing anesthetized dogs. Prevagotomy, the increase in lung volume (functional residual capacity) and decrease in initial resting length of the diaphragm were attenuated by greater than 50% of values predicted by the passive relationships. Diaphragmatic activation (electromyogram) increased and tidal volume (VT) was preserved. Postvagotomy, effective expiratory muscle recruitment was abolished. The triangularis sterni muscle remained active, and the increase in lung volume was attenuated by less than 15% of that predicted by the passive relationship. Diaphragmatic length was shorter than predicted. VT was not restored, even though costal diaphragmatic and parasternal intercostal electromyogram increased. During expiratory threshold loading with abdominal muscles resected and vagus intact, recruitment of the rib cage expiratory muscles produced a reduction in lung volume comparable with prevagotomy; however, diaphragmatic length decreased markedly. Both the rib cage and abdominal expiratory muscles may defend lung volume; however, their combined action is important to restore diaphragmatic initial length and, accordingly, to preserve VT.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jappl.1991.70.4.1554DOI Listing

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