Patterns of Respiration
Patterns of Respiration
BY
AHMAD YOUNES
PROFESSOR OF THORACIC MEDICINE
Mansoura faculty of medicine
The central pattern generator is composed of
predominately three neuronal groups
1- Dorsal respiratory group
2- Ventral respiratory group
3- Pontine respiratory group.
– The dorsal respiratory group is in the ventrolateral
subnucleus of the nucleus tractus solitarius. This
neuronal group is primarily active during inspiration
receiving input from pulmonary vagal afferents.
Many of these neurons excite lower motor cranial
nerves that dilate the upper airway prior to excitation of
the contralateral phrenic and intercostal neurons in the
spinal cord. This coordinated output must occur in the
correct timed sequence to permit the movement of air
through a patent airway.
Ventral respiratory group
• The ventral respiratory group is located in the ventral lateral
medulla from the top of the cervical cord to the level of the
facial nerve.
• This group contains the Botzinger complex, the preBotzinger
neurons, the rostral portion of nucleus ambiguous, and
nucleus retroambigualis.
• The Botzinger complex contains neurons that are active
during expiration and inhibit inspiration.
• The preBotzinger complex contains propriobulbar neurons that
participate in generating the rhythm of respiration.
• The caudal portion of this group is primarily composed of
expiratory neurons that project to intercostal, abdominal, and
external sphincter motor neurons.
Ventilatory control
• The medullary centers respond to direct influences from
the upper airways, intra-arterial chemoreceptors, and
lung afferents by the 5th, 9th, and 10th cranial nerves,
respectively.
• The dorsal respiratory group seems to be active
primarily during inspiration .
• The ventral respiratory group, contains both inspiratory
and expiratory neurons. Ventral respiratory group
output increases in response to the need for forced
expiration occurring during exercise or with increased
airways resistance.
• Respiratory effector muscles are innervated from the
ventral respiratory group by phrenic, intercostal, and
abdominal motoneurons.
Pontine respiratory centers
• The pneumotaxic center in the rostral pons consists of the
nucleus parabrachialis and the Kolliker-Fuse nucleus.
• This area seems primarily to influence the duration of inspiration
and provide tonic input to respiratory pattern generators.
• The apneustic center, located in the lower pons, functions to
provide signals that terminate smoothly inspiratory efforts.
• The pontine input serves to fine tune respiratory patterns and
may additionally modulate responses to hypercapnia, hypoxia, and
lung inflation.
• The automatic central control of respiration may be influenced and
temporarily overridden by volitional control from the cerebral
cortex (motor area , area 4,6) for a variety of activities, such as
speech, singing, laughing, intentional and psychogenic
alterations of respiration, and breath holding.
Descending motoneurons include two
anatomically separate groups:
• The corticospinal and corticobulbar tracts for the volitional
control of respiration and
• The reticulospinal tracts for the automatic control of
respiration .
• volitional respiratory act is associated with a suppression
of the background spontaneous breathing (automatic
respiratory rhythm). Such an inhibition is obvious in
specific respiratory acts such as breath holding, during
speech, and when playing a wind instrument.
• These voluntary modifications of breathing pattern (both in
term of amplitude and frequency) can be made for long
periods of time without any superimposed automatic
rhythmic activity at least as long as PaCO2 does not rise.
Central chemoreceptors
• Central chemoreceptors, located primarily within the
ventrolateral surface of medulla, respond to changes in
brain extracellular fluid [H1] concentration.
• Other receptors have been recently identified in the
brainstem, hypothalamus, and the cerebellum.
• These receptors are effectively CO2 receptors because
central [H1] concentrations are directly dependent on
central PCO2 levels.
• Central [H1] may differ significantly from arterial [H1]
because the blood-brain barrier prevents polar solute
diffusion into the cerebrospinal fluid. This isolation results
in an indirect central response to most peripheral acid-
base disturbances mediated through changes in PaCO2.
• Central responses to changes in PCO2 levels are also
slightly delayed for a few minutes by the location of
receptors in the brain only, rather than in peripheral
vascular tissues.
Peripheral chemoreceptors
• Peripheral chemoreceptors include the carotid bodies
and the aortic bodies.
• The carotid bodies, located bilaterally at the bifurcation
of the internal and external carotid arteries, are the
primary peripheral monitors.
• They are highly vascular structures that monitor the
status of blood about to be delivered to the brain and
provide afferent input to the medulla through the 9th
cranial nerve.
• The carotid bodies respond mainly to PaO2, but also to
changes in PaCO2 and pH.
• They do not respond to lowered oxygen content from
anemia or carbon monoxide toxicity.
Other afferent pathways
• Pulmonary stretch receptors are located in proximal
airway smooth muscles, and respond to inflation,
especially in the setting of hyperinflation. Pulmonary
stretch receptors mediate a shortened inspiratory
and prolonged expiratory duration.
• Additional input is also provided by rapidly adapting
receptors that sense flow and irritation. J receptors
are located in the juxtacapillary area and seem to
mediate dyspnea in the setting of pulmonary vascular
congestion.
• Bronchial c-fibers also affect bronchomotor tone and
respond to pulmonary inflammation.
Other afferent pathways
• Afferent activity from chest wall and respiratory
muscles additionally influences central controller
activity.
• Feedback information regarding muscle stretch,
loading, and fatigue may impact both regulatory
and somato-sensory responses.
• Upper airway receptors promote airway patency
by activation of local muscles including the
genioglossus.
During sleep
• During sleep, the metabolic rate falls (hence,
decreased CO2 production), but this is offset by
a proportionately greater fall in minute
ventilation with the result that the PaCO2
increases slightly.
• The fall in ventilation is due to increased upper
airway resistance and decreased
chemosensitivity as well as the loss of the
wakefulness stimulus to breathe.
• The result is that the PaCO2 rises and the PaO2
falls slightly
Because of the normal position on the flat portion of the O2Hb
dissociation curve, there is little change in the SaO2 as a result of the
fall in PO2 associated with sleep . If the baseline awake PaO2 is lower,
the fall in SaO2 will be greater for the same drop in PaO2.
Sleep Apnea