The response to tracheal stimulation (50 μl of tap water) during wakefulness, non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep was investigated in adult cats. In wakefulness, repetitive coughing occurred on 80% of the trials. In NREM and REM sleep, the most frequent response (approximately 69% and 58% of the trials, respectively) was arousal, followed by coughing. Apneas occurred following the stimulus and before arousal in 11% and 24% of the trials in NREM and REM sleep, respectively. In NREM sleep, the tracheal stimulus sometimes evoked expiratory efforts following a normal inspiratory elf oft (11% of the trials). These were much weaker than the expiratory efforts during coughing in wakefulness. In REM sleep, stimulation in 11% of the trials elicited increased inspiratory efforts. Although these may have been diminutive preparatory inspirations for coughing, they were much smaller than preparatory inspirations associated with coughing in wakefulness, and they were never followed by active expiratory efforts. Arousal from either NREM or REM sleep in response to tracheal stimulation was sometimes associated with an augmented breath. This response, which is common upon spontaneous arousal, may lead to deeper aspiration of the tracheal fluid. We conclude that in cats coughing requires wakefulness and thai airway stimuli in sleep cause a variety of respiratory responses, some of which may be maladaptive.
CITATION STYLE
Anderson, C. A., Dick, T. E., & Orem, J. (1996). Respiratory responses to tracheobronchial stimulation during sleep and wakefulness in the adult cat. Sleep, 19(6), 472–478. https://doi.org/10.1093/sleep/19.6.472
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.