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Phrenic afferents and ventilatory control
Authors:J D Road
Affiliation:Department of Medicine, University Hospital, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
Abstract:It has been understood since the late 1800s that the diaphragm has significant sensory innervation. The role of phrenic afferents in the control of breathing, however, has been obscure. The phrenic nerve has been shown to contain a full array of afferent fibers. However, proprioceptive (group 1 fibers) afferents are few compared to postural muscles or the intercostals. The diaphragm, unlike the inspiratory intercostal muscles, has a small complement of spindle afferents and not all of these spindles are supplied with fusorial fibers. Reduced spindle afferents under gamma control help to explain previous studies of the diaphragm that have failed to reveal autogenic facilitation, that is, a reflex-mediated increase in drive during inspiratory loading. Nevertheless, some clinical studies have revealed increased activation of the diaphragm when its length is reduced. Group 1 fibers, which are predominantly tendon organ afferents in the diaphragm, have been shown to have a phasic inhibitory function. A reduction in this inhibition brought about by a reduction in diaphragmatic length during lung inflation may explain the increased diaphragmatic activation reported in clinical studies. Phrenic afferents have been shown to have multiple spinal and supraspinal projections. Recent studies have explored the ventilatory effects of thin fiber afferents (group III and IV fibers) in the phrenic nerve. Stimulation of these afferents has been shown both to inhibit and excite ventilation. These afferents arise from polymodal receptors that respond to both mechanical and chemical stimulation. Activation of these receptors may occur in a variety of conditions and the ventilatory response may be determined by the specific receptor activated.
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