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AJP - Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology, Vol 237, Issue 5 260-R265, Copyright © 1979 by American Physiological Society
ARTICLES |
R. D. Tallman Jr, A. L. Kunz and D. A. Miller
These experiments were conducted to see if the pacing phenomenon found by Kunz and Miller (Respir. Physiol., 22: 167--177, 1974) in the open-loop, unidirectionally ventilated chicken is important in normally breathing birds. In this study, chickens breathed spontaneously through a tracheostomy from a gas source in which the fraction of CO2 (FICO2) could be rapidly changed. A feedback algorithm kept the FICO2 at 0.05 except for a constant duration pulse (approx 0.6 s) of low FICO2 given tau seconds after the beginning of each inspiration. In all birds tested an increase in tau resulted in a proportional increase of both inspiratory period (TI), expiratory period (TE), and the total period (Ttot). Increases in TI were from 0.5 to 1.0 times the increase in tau. Dynamic expeiments showed TI usually changed on the next breath after a step change in tau, and sinusoidal modulation of tau caused concurrent sinusoidal changes in TI, TE, and Ttot. These findings indicate that the phenomenon that produced pacing in the unidirectionally ventilated birds is important to the ventilatory pattern of normal breathing.
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