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Some effects of vagal blockade on abdominal muscle activation and shortening in awake dogs. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examines how abdominal muscle activation varies between expiratory threshold loading (ETL) and hypercapnia, focusing on the role of vagal feedback.
  • Following the removal of vagal input, there was a notable increase in lung volume during ETL, but a reduction in active shortening of abdominal muscles.
  • The findings suggest that while vagal feedback influences muscle recruitment during these conditions, awake dogs can still recruit abdominal muscles via extravagal mechanisms even after vagal blockade.

Article Abstract

1. The mechanisms of abdominal muscle activation are thought to be different during expiratory threshold loading (ETL) compared with hypercapnia. Our objectives in the present study were to determine the effects of removing excitatory vagal feedback on abdominal muscle activation, shortening and pattern of recruitment during ETL and hypercapnia. Six tracheotomized dogs were chronically implanted with sonomicrometer transducers and fine wire EMG electrodes in each of the four abdominal muscles. Muscle length changes and EMG activity were studied in the awake dog during ETL (6 dogs) and CO2 rebreathing (3 dogs), before and after vagal blockade. 2. Following vagal blockade, the change in volume (increase in functional residual capacity, FRC) during ETL was greater and active phasic shortening of all the abdominal muscles was reduced, when shortening was compared with a similar change in lung volume. Similarly, at comparable minute ventilation, abdominal muscle active shortening was also reduced during hypercapnia. The internal muscle layer was recruited preferentially in both control and vagally blocked dogs during both ETL and hypercapnia. 3. The degree of recruitment of the abdominal muscles during ETL and hypercapnia in awake dogs is influenced by vagal feedback, but less so than in anaesthetized dogs. These results illustrate the importance of the vagi and abdominal muscle activation in load compensation. However, vagal reflexes are apparently not contributing to the preferential recruitment of the internal muscle layer. In awake dogs during vagal blockade abdominal muscle recruitment still occurs by extravagal mechanisms.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1156685PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1995.sp020981DOI Listing

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