Physiological Reports (Mar 2024)
Cervical spinal cord hemisection impacts sigh and the respiratory reset in male rats
Abstract
Abstract Cervical spinal cord injury impacts ventilatory and non‐ventilatory functions of the diaphragm muscle (DIAm) and contributes to clinical morbidity and mortality in the afflicted population. Periodically, integrated brainstem neural circuit activity drives the DIAm to generate a markedly augmented effort or sigh—which plays an important role in preventing atelectasis and thus maintaining lung function. Across species, the general pattern of DIAm efforts during a normal sigh is variable in amplitude and the extent of post‐sigh “apnea” (i.e., the post‐sigh inter‐breath interval). This post‐sigh inter‐breath interval acts as a respiratory reset, following the interruption of regular respiratory rhythm by sigh. We examined the impact of upper cervical (C2) spinal cord hemisection (C2SH) on the transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) generated during sighs and the post‐sigh respiratory reset in rats. Sighs were identified in Pdi traces by their characteristic biphasic pattern. We found that C2SH results in a reduction of Pdi during both eupnea and sighs, and a decrease in the immediate post‐sigh breath interval. These results are consistent with partial removal of descending excitatory synaptic inputs to phrenic motor neurons that results from C2SH. Following cervical spinal cord injury, a reduction in the amplitude of Pdi during sighs may compromise the maintenance of normal lung function.
Keywords