-
- Y Jammes.
- Laboratoire de Médecine Expérimentale et GS 15 C.N.R.S., Faculté de Médicine, Marseille, France.
- Eur. Respir. J. 1988 Feb 1; 1 (2): 176-83.
AbstractBoth respiratory centres and the preganglionic vagal motoneurones, which control respiratory (striated) and airway (smooth) muscles respectively, receive information on the lungs, the circulation and the skeletal and respiratory muscles. Each of these nervous pathways has two components: one is phasic, i.e. in phase with biological rhythms, and comes from mechanoreceptors connected to large myelinated fibres; the second has a tonic low frequency firing rate and corresponds to the spontaneous activity of polymodal receptors connected to thin sensory fibres, which act mostly as sensors of changes in extracellular fluid composition (O2 and/or CO2 partial pressure, pH, release of algesic agents etc...). Some of them also detect large mechanical disturbances or local temperature changes. The influence of tonic background sensory activity is well known in animals concerning the role played by arterial chemoreceptors in the control of ventilation and of thin vagal afferents from the lungs (bronchopulmonary C-fibres and irritant receptors) in reflex facilitation of the bronchoconstrictor vagal tone. Moreover, the stimulation of thin sensory fibres in particular circumstances is responsible for hyperventilation (arterial chemoreceptors and muscle afferents), increased airway tone (arterial chemoreceptors and mostly thin vagal afferent fibres) or bronchodilation (muscle afferents). These peripheral inputs project centrally on different structures and also on brain stem neurones, which integrate simultaneously chemosensory, vagal and muscle information. This results in complex interactions between the different sensory pathways.
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