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Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol (December 24, 2003). doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00225.2003
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Submitted on April 28, 2003
Accepted on December 18, 2003

Hypothermia and hypoxia inhibit the Hering-Breuer reflex in the marsupial newborn

Peter M MacFarlane1 and Peter B Frappell1*

1 Zoology, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: p.frappell{at}latrobe.edu.au.

The effects of lowering body temperature (Tb) on metabolic rate, ventilation and the strength of the Hering-Breuer expiratory promoting reflex (HB reflex, determined from an inhibitory ratio calculated from volumetric measurements of the respiratory rhythm) were examined in 18-day-old ectothermic pouch young of the tammar wallaby during normoxia or hypoxia (10% O2). Hypoxia and hypothermia, either singularly or combined, depressed metabolic rate. At all Tb the hypoxic hyperventilation was associated with a significant hyperpnoea. At pouch Tb (36.5°C) during normoxia, inflation of the lungs with -5 or -10 cmH2O extra-thoracic pressure induced a significant HB reflex. Exposure to cold reduced the strength of the reflex, almost abolishing it at 28°C. For Tb above 28°C the reflex in hypoxia was always less than the corresponding normoxic value. Taken in context with the changes in metabolic state that occurred, these data in the ectothermic marsupial newborn suggest that the decline in the HB reflex during moderate hypothermia is the result of a direct effect of Tb on vagal mechanisms rather than a temperature driven decline in metabolic rate that should have acted to strengthen the HB reflex. Therefore, it seems that inputs inhibitory to breathing are more negatively affected during cold than those inputs that are excitatory.







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