Tohoku J. Exp. Med., 2006, 209(2)

Mice with Blunted Hypoxic Ventilatory Response are Susceptible to Respiratory Disturbance during Hypoxia

TETSUYA ADACHI,1 HIROMASA OGAWA,1,2 SHINICHI OKABE,1 TOMOMI KITAMURO,1 YOSHIHIRO KIKUCHI,1 SHIGEKI SHIBAHARA,3 KUNIO SHIRATO1 and WATARU HIDA1,2

1Department of Cardiovascular and Respiratory Medicine, Tohoku University School of Medicine, 2Health Administration Center, Tohoku University, 3Department of Molecular Biology and Applied Physiology, Tohoku University School of Medicine, Sendai, Japan

Hypoxia causes a life-threatening situation, and the ventilatory response to hypoxia plays an important role in preventing death. We have hypothesized that persons with a blunted hypoxic ventilatory response may have a weak defense response to hypoxic episodes and be susceptible to fatal respiratory disturbances. However, precise correlations between the hypoxic ventilatory response and respiratory disturbances are not well understood. In the present study we examined the hypoxic and hypercapnic ventilatory responses in nine inbred mouse strains (A/J, AKR/N, BALB/c, C3H/He, C57BL/6, DBA/2, NZW, SWR/J, and 129Sv). Breathing frequency, tidal volume and minute ventilation of unanesthetized and unrestrained mice were assessed by whole body plethysmography. Age-matched mice were exposed for 3 min to 10% O2 in N2 gas or 10% CO2 in hyperoxic gas to determine the acute ventilatory response to chemical stimuli. Basal respiratory variables and hypoxic ventilatory responses differed among the strains, but the hypercapnic ventilatory response did not differ. The hypoxic ventilatory response was the highest in AKR/N mice and the lowest in SWR/J mice. These findings suggest that genetic factors may have influenced the hypoxic ventilatory response but not the hypercapnic ventilatory response. To examine the effects of severe hypoxic stress on the respiratory cycle, we exposed the strain with the highest or lowest hypoxic ventilatory response to 6% O2 in N2 until the onset of apnea. The “appearance time of apnea”, which is defined as the time from the hypoxic loading to the onset of apnea, was shorter in the SWR/J strain than in the AKR/N strain. We suggest that a lower hypoxic ventilatory response may be a risk factor for apnea under hypoxia.

keywords —— blunted ventilatory reponse; hypoxic-induced apnea; genetics; respiration; animal

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Tohoku J. Exp. Med., 2006, 209, 125-134

Correspondence: Wataru Hida, M.D., Ph.D., Health Administration Center, Tohoku University, Kawauchi 41, Aoba-ku, Sendai 980-8576, Japan.

e-mail: hida@health.is.tohoku.ac.jp