Control of Respiration Flashcards

1
Q

What are the components of neural control of respiration?

A

generation of respiration rhythm
regulation of rate/depth of breathing

modification of respiratory movements

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2
Q

What os the pre-Botzinger complex?

A

importation for generation of respiration rhythm
similar to SA node - “primes” pump
- can be modified by [gas] in blood
contains pacemaker cells that initiate spontaneous breathing

assigns rhythmic pattern of breathing

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3
Q

Describe the dorsal respiratory group. What kind of neurons? What stimulated it? What do they stimulate?

A

inspiratory neurons ONLY

expiration occurs when neuronal firing ceases

stimulated by:
CSF chemoreceptors - how much CO2 from arteries
carotid/aortic chemo and baroreceptors from vagus and glossopharyngeal nerves
bpneustic center - pons

stimulates: diaphragm and external intercostal muscles

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4
Q

Describe the ventral respiratory group. What kind of neurons? What do they stimulate?

A

inspiratory and expiratory neurons - motor control for inspiration/expiration during exercise
- increases force of inspiratory, forced exhalation

expiratory neurons stimulate internal intercostal and anterior abdominal muscles

inspiratory neurons activate accessory inspiratory muscles

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5
Q

What is the ramp affect and which respiratory group is responsible for them?

A

ramp effect - after pre-Botzinger effect, increased firing frequency increase the depth of inspiration
- once firing stops, passive exhalation occurs

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6
Q

Describe the pontine respiratory group (pneumotaxic center). What is its function? What does it receive input from, and what effect does it have on the apneustic center?

A

regulates the quantity of air inhaled with each inspiration

receives excitatory input from limbic, cerebral cortex, and ANS
- when activated, inhibits apneustic center
- in turn, this inhibits the inspiration neurons of dorsal respiratory group and decreases time of inspiration

quick, shallow breaths when activated

without pontine respiratory group - prolonged inspiration and short expiratory gasps

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7
Q

Describe the pons or apneustic center. What is its function? What does it receive input from? What does it affect?

A

fine tuning over medullary centers - stimulate inhalation

pneumotaxic center has inhibitory effect

has excitatory effect on dorsal respiratory group
- prolongs deep inhalations
- prevents cessation of breathing

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8
Q

How do the central chemoreceptors in the 4th ventricle know the [H+] in arterial blood?

A

H+ cannot cross BBB, but CO2 can
- CO2 crosses BBB into cerebrospinal fluid
- combines with H2O via Carbonic anhydrase to make H2CO3

H2CO3 dissociates into H+ and HCO3-
- central chemoreceptors in 4th ventricle bind to H+ and stimulates respiratory control centers to increase ventilation

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9
Q

Where are the peripheral chemoreceptors and what are they sensitive to?

A

locations:
aortic arch - vagus nerve
fork of common carotid artery - glossopharyngeal

glomus cells - receptors for H+ and O2 cause K channels to close
- located in carotid body
- constantly hyper polarized, when H+/O2 enter, cell depolarizes and Va channels open, vesicles with dopamine open
- signals to medullary centers to increase ventilation

sensitive to: arterial pH, PO2, PCO2 (low sensitivity)

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10
Q

What are the Hering Breur and irritant reflexes?

A

Hering Breur - stretch receptors present in visceral pleura and bronchi/bronchioles
- inhibitory impulses are sent to medullary respiratory centers

Irritant - reflex construction of bronchioles
reflex stimulus of cough or sneeze

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11
Q

Describe how PCO2, arterial pH, and PO2 affect rate and depth of breathing

A

PCO2 - higher PCO2 in arterial blood causes pH to fall
- lower pH increases rate and depth of breath
- most powerful respiratory stimulant

Arterial pH - H+ ions in venous blood do not shift easily into CSF
- H+ ions increase due to CO2 retention and metabolic disorders

PO2 - low O2 tension augments effect of CO2 in carotid sinus
- when PO2 drops below 60 mmHg, it becomes the major stimulus to respiration via peripheral chemoreceptors

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