Hypoxia silences the neural activities in the early phase of the phrenic neurogram of eupnea in the piglet

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Objective</p> <p>We investigated phrenic neurogram patterns during eupnea (normal breathing) and severe hypoxia (gasping) during early maturation in the piglet.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We used continuous wavelet transform and sho...

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Main Author: Akay Metin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2005-11-01
Series:Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
Online Access:http://www.jneuroengrehab.com/content/2/1/32
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spelling doaj-8b93c174ac2a4febb34c185d2069acb72020-11-24T21:45:06ZengBMCJournal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation1743-00032005-11-01213210.1186/1743-0003-2-32Hypoxia silences the neural activities in the early phase of the phrenic neurogram of eupnea in the pigletAkay Metin<p>Abstract</p> <p>Objective</p> <p>We investigated phrenic neurogram patterns during eupnea (normal breathing) and severe hypoxia (gasping) during early maturation in the piglet.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We used continuous wavelet transform and short time Fourier transform methods to examine the similarity of breathing patterns in both time and frequency domains during early maturation. The phrenic neurogram was recorded during eupnea, severe hypoxia, and recovery from severe hypoxia in piglets in three different age groups: 3–6 days, 10–15 days and 29–35 days.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>During the first week of postnatal age, respiratory patterns of phrenic activity were marked by frequency components between 30 and 300 Hz during both the early (first half) and late (second half) phases of the neurogram signals during eupnea. The results suggest that there is little difference between the respiratory patterns in both time and frequency domains during eupnea compared to gasping for the first week of postnatal age in piglets. After the first week of postnatal age, the duration of the phrenic neurogram burst significantly increases and the patterns during the early phase of the phrenic neurogram are different from those observed for gasping. However, the patterns that mark the late phase of the phrenic neurograms are still the same as those of gasping.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our most significant finding is that hypoxia silences the neural activity in the early phase of phrenic neurogram regardless of maturation.</p> http://www.jneuroengrehab.com/content/2/1/32
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Akay Metin
spellingShingle Akay Metin
Hypoxia silences the neural activities in the early phase of the phrenic neurogram of eupnea in the piglet
Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
author_facet Akay Metin
author_sort Akay Metin
title Hypoxia silences the neural activities in the early phase of the phrenic neurogram of eupnea in the piglet
title_short Hypoxia silences the neural activities in the early phase of the phrenic neurogram of eupnea in the piglet
title_full Hypoxia silences the neural activities in the early phase of the phrenic neurogram of eupnea in the piglet
title_fullStr Hypoxia silences the neural activities in the early phase of the phrenic neurogram of eupnea in the piglet
title_full_unstemmed Hypoxia silences the neural activities in the early phase of the phrenic neurogram of eupnea in the piglet
title_sort hypoxia silences the neural activities in the early phase of the phrenic neurogram of eupnea in the piglet
publisher BMC
series Journal of NeuroEngineering and Rehabilitation
issn 1743-0003
publishDate 2005-11-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Objective</p> <p>We investigated phrenic neurogram patterns during eupnea (normal breathing) and severe hypoxia (gasping) during early maturation in the piglet.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We used continuous wavelet transform and short time Fourier transform methods to examine the similarity of breathing patterns in both time and frequency domains during early maturation. The phrenic neurogram was recorded during eupnea, severe hypoxia, and recovery from severe hypoxia in piglets in three different age groups: 3–6 days, 10–15 days and 29–35 days.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>During the first week of postnatal age, respiratory patterns of phrenic activity were marked by frequency components between 30 and 300 Hz during both the early (first half) and late (second half) phases of the neurogram signals during eupnea. The results suggest that there is little difference between the respiratory patterns in both time and frequency domains during eupnea compared to gasping for the first week of postnatal age in piglets. After the first week of postnatal age, the duration of the phrenic neurogram burst significantly increases and the patterns during the early phase of the phrenic neurogram are different from those observed for gasping. However, the patterns that mark the late phase of the phrenic neurograms are still the same as those of gasping.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our most significant finding is that hypoxia silences the neural activity in the early phase of phrenic neurogram regardless of maturation.</p>
url http://www.jneuroengrehab.com/content/2/1/32
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