Abstract The present study was designed to establish a midcervical contusion model that can simulate long-term respiratory deficits, and investigate the breathing pattern during vagal-mediated respiratory reflexes following midcervical contusion.… Click to show full abstract
Abstract The present study was designed to establish a midcervical contusion model that can simulate long-term respiratory deficits, and investigate the breathing pattern during vagal-mediated respiratory reflexes following midcervical contusion. Moderate and severe (impactor height: 6.25 or 12.5 mm) contusion was induced at midline C3-4 spinal cord in adult Sprague–Dawley rats. The ventilatory behaviors of unanesthetized were evaluated by whole body plethysmography at 1 day and 1, 2, 4, and 8 weeks post-injury. The tidal volume was decreased and frequency was increased in contused animals compared with uninjured animals at the acute injury state. At 8 weeks post-injury, respiratory frequency was similar between groups; however, contused animals had lower tidal volume. The pulmonary chemoreflex induced by intrajugular capsaicin (1.5 μg/kg) injection and the Hering–Breuer inflation reflex induced by increasing positive end-expired pressure (9 cm H2O) were evoked in anesthetized animals at 3 days, or 2 or 8...
               
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