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Modulation of Serotonin and Adenosine 2A Receptors on Intermittent Hypoxia-Induced Respiratory Recovery following Mid-Cervical Contusion in the Rat.

Authors :
Wen MH
Wu MJ
Vinit S
Lee KZ
Source :
Journal of neurotrauma [J Neurotrauma] 2019 Nov 01; Vol. 36 (21), pp. 2991-3004. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Jul 10.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The present study was designed to evaluate the therapeutic effectiveness and mechanism of acute intermittent hypoxia on respiratory function at distinct injury stages following mid-cervical spinal contusion. In the first experiment, adult male rats received laminectomy or unilateral contusion at 3rd-4th cervical spinal cord at 9 weeks of age. The ventilatory behavior in response to mild acute intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia (10 episodes of 5 min of hypoxia [10% O <subscript>2</subscript> , 4% CO <subscript>2</subscript> , 86% N <subscript>2</subscript> ] with 5 min of normoxia intervals) was measured by whole-body plethysmography at the acute (∼3 days), subchronic (∼2 weeks), and chronic (∼8 weeks) injury stages. The minute ventilation of contused animals is significantly enhanced following acute intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia due to an augmentation of the tidal volume at all time-points post-injury. However, acute intermittent hypercapnia-hypoxia-induced ventilatory long-term facilitation was only observed in uninjured animals at the acute stage. During the second experiment, the effect of acute intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia on respiration was examined in contused animals after a blockade of serotonin receptors, or adenosine 2A receptors. The results demonstrated that acute intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia-induced enhancement of minute ventilation was attenuated by a serotonin receptor antagonist (methysergide) but enhanced by an adenosine 2A receptor antagonist (KW6002) at the subchronic and chronic injury stages. These results suggested that acute intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia can induce respiratory recovery from acute to chronic injury stages. The therapeutic effectiveness of intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia is dampened by the inhibition of serotonin receptors, but a blockade of adenosine 2A receptors enhanced respiratory recovery induced by intermittent hypercapnic-hypoxia.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1557-9042
Volume :
36
Issue :
21
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of neurotrauma
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31099299
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1089/neu.2018.6371