Publication | Open Access
Morphine has latent deleterious effects on the ventilatory responses to a hypoxic challenge*
31
Citations
52
References
2013
Year
The aim of this study was to determine whether morphine depresses the ventilatory responses elicited by a hypoxic challenge (10% O<sub>2</sub>, 90% N<sub>2</sub>) in conscious rats at a time when the effects of morphine on arterial blood gas (ABG) chemistry, Alveolar-arterial (A-a) gradient and minute ventilation (V<sub>M</sub>) had completely subsided. In vehicle-treated rats, each episode of hypoxia stimulated ventilatory function and the responses generally subsided during each normoxic period. Morphine (5 mg/kg, i.v.) induced an array of depressant effects on ABG chemistry, A-a gradient and V<sub>M</sub> (via decreases in tidal volume). Despite resolution of these morphine-induced effects, the first episode of hypoxia elicited substantially smaller increases in V<sub>M</sub> than in vehicle-treated rats, due mainly to smaller increases in frequency of breathing. The pattern of ventilatory responses during subsequent episodes of hypoxia and normoxia changed substantially in morphine-treated rats. It is evident that morphine has latent deleterious effects on ventilatory responses elicited by hypoxic challenge.
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