AI Article Synopsis

  • Extreme heat from climate change is linked to a rise in infectious diseases and heat-related health issues, making it crucial to understand how heat, inflammation, and disease interact.
  • In neonates, the TRPV1 channel, sensitive to heat and inflammation, affects breathing and may make them more prone to seizures during heat stress.
  • Research on neonatal rats showed that inflammation from LPS lowers seizure thresholds during heat stress; blocking TRPV1 reduced seizure risk and improved breathing efficiency, indicating that inflammation worsens respiratory issues and seizure susceptibility through TRPV1 in vagus neurons.

Article Abstract

Extreme heat caused by climate change is increasing the transmission of infectious diseases, resulting in a sharp rise in heat-related illness and mortality. Understanding the mechanistic link between heat, inflammation, and disease is thus important for public health. Thermal hyperpnea, and consequent respiratory alkalosis, is crucial in febrile seizures and convulsions induced by heat stress in humans. Here, we address what causes thermal hyperpnea in neonates and how it is affected by inflammation. Transient receptor potential cation channel subfamily V member 1 (TRPV1), a heat-activated channel, is sensitized by inflammation and modulates breathing and thus may play a key role. To investigate whether inflammatory sensitization of TRPV1 modifies neonatal ventilatory responses to heat stress, leading to respiratory alkalosis and an increased susceptibility to hyperthermic seizures, we treated neonatal rats with bacterial LPS, and breathing, arterial pH, vagus nerve activity, and seizure susceptibility were assessed during heat stress in the presence or absence of a TRPV1 antagonist (AMG-9810) or shRNA-mediated TRPV1 suppression. LPS-induced inflammatory preconditioning lowered the threshold temperature and latency of hyperthermic seizures. This was accompanied by increased tidal volume, minute ventilation, expired CO, and arterial pH (alkalosis). LPS exposure also elevated vagal spiking and intracellular calcium concentrations in response to hyperthermia. TRPV1 inhibition with AMG-9810 or shRNA reduced the LPS-induced susceptibility to hyperthermic seizures and altered the breathing pattern to fast shallow breaths (tachypnea), making each breath less efficient and restoring arterial pH. These results indicate that inflammation exacerbates thermal hyperpnea-induced respiratory alkalosis associated with increased susceptibility to hyperthermic seizures, primarily mediated by TRPV1 localized to vagus neurons.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11299082PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1165/rcmb.2023-0451OCDOI Listing

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