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DEVELOPMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY AND PREGNANCY
Department of Physiology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Submitted 15 June 2007 ; accepted in final form 3 August 2007
We investigated the effects of sustained embryonic hypoxia on the neonatal ventilatory chemosensitivity. White Leghorn chicken eggs were incubated at 38°C either in 21% O2 throughout incubation (normoxia, Nx) or in 15% O2 from embryonic day 5 (hypoxia, Hx), hatching time included. Hx embryos hatched
11 h later than Nx, with similar body weights. Measurements of gaseous metabolism (oxygen consumption,
O2) and pulmonary ventilation (
E) were conducted either within the first 8 h (early) or later hours (late) of the first posthatching day. In resting conditions, Hx had similar
O2 and body temperature (Tb) and slightly higher
E and ventilatory equivalent (
E/
O2) than Nx. Ventilatory chemosensitivity was evaluated from the degree of hyperpnea (increase in
E) and of hyperventilation (increase in
E/
O2) during acute hypoxia (15 and 10% O2, 20 min each) and acute hypercapnia (2 and 4% CO2, 20 min each). The chemosensitivity differed between the early and late hours, and at either time the responses to hypoxia and hypercapnia were less in Hx than in Nx because of a lower increase in
E and a lower hypoxic hypometabolism. In a second group of Nx and Hx hatchlings, the
E response to 10% O2 was tested in the same hatchlings at the early and late hours. The results confirmed the lower hypoxic chemosensitivity of Hx. We conclude that hypoxic incubation affected the development of respiratory control, resulting in a blunted ventilatory chemosensitivity.
developmental plasticity; epigenetic adaptation; hypercapnia; hypometabolism; hypoxic ventilatory response
This article has been cited by other articles:
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R. W. Bavis and G. S. Mitchell Long-term effects of the perinatal environment on respiratory control J Appl Physiol, April 1, 2008; 104(4): 1220 - 1229. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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