Acute intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia elicits central neural respiratory motor plasticity in humans

Joseph F Welch*, Jayakrishnan Nair, Patrick J Argento, Gordon S Mitchell, Emily J Fox

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Acute intermittent hypoxia (AIH) elicits long-term facilitation (LTF) of respiration. Although LTF is observed when CO2 is elevated during AIH in awake humans, the influence of CO2 on corticospinal respiratory motor plasticity is unknown. Thus, we tested the hypotheses that acute intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia (AIHH): (1) enhances cortico-phrenic neurotransmission (reflecting volitional respiratory control); and (2) elicits ventilatory LTF (reflecting automatic respiratory control). Eighteen healthy adults completed four study visits. Day 1 consisted of anthropometry and pulmonary function testing. On Days 2, 3 and 4, in a balanced alternating sequence, participants received: AIHH, poikilocapnic AIH, and normocapnic-normoxia (Sham). Protocols consisted of 15, 60 s exposures with 90 s normoxic intervals. Transcranial (TMS) and cervical (CMS) magnetic stimulation were used to induce diaphragmatic motor-evoked potentials and compound muscle action potentials, respectively. Respiratory drive was assessed via mouth occlusion pressure (P0.1), and minute ventilation measured at rest. Dependent variables were assessed at baseline and 30–60 min after exposures. Increases in TMS-evoked diaphragm potential amplitudes were observed following AIHH vs. Sham (+28 ± 41%, P = 0.003), but not after AIH. No changes were observed in CMS-evoked diaphragm potential amplitudes. Mouth occlusion pressure also increased after AIHH (+21 ± 34%, P = 0.033), but not after AIH. Ventilatory LTF was not observed after any treatment. We demonstrate that AIHH elicits central neural mechanisms of respiratory motor plasticity and increases resting respiratory drive in awake humans. These findings may have important implications for neurorehabilitation after spinal cord injury and other neuromuscular disorders compromising breathing.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2515-2533
Number of pages19
JournalThe Journal of Physiology
Volume600
Issue number10
Early online date29 Mar 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 May 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • acute intermittent hypoxia
  • asphyxia
  • diaphragm
  • hypercapnia
  • long-term facilitation
  • magnetic stimulation
  • motor-evoked potential
  • neuroplasticity
  • phrenic

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