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      Putative projection of phrenic afferents to the limbic cortex in humans studied with cerebral-evoked potentials.

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          Abstract

          Respiratory sensations may rely in part on cortical integration of respiratory afferent information. In an attempt to study such projections, we recorded evoked potentials at scalp and cervical sites in 10 normal volunteers undergoing transcutaneous phrenic stimulation (0.1-ms square pulses, intensity liminal for diaphragmatic activation, series of 600 shocks at 2 Hz). A negative cerebral component of peak latency (12.79 +/- 0.54 ms; N13) was constant, and a negative spinal component (7.09 +/- 1.04 ms; N7) could also be recorded, all results being reproducible over time. Monitoring of cardiac frequency, skin anesthesia, and stimulation adjacent to the phrenic nerve made the phrenic origin of N7 and N13 the foremost hypothesis. Increasing stimulation frequency and comparison with median nerve stimulation provided arguments for the neural nature of the signals and their cerebral origin. Recordings from intracerebral electrodes in a patient showed a polarity reversal of the evoked potentials at the level of the cingulate gyrus. In conclusion, phrenic stimulation could allow one to study projections of phrenic afferents to the central nervous system in humans. Their exact site and physiological meaning remain to be clarified.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J. Appl. Physiol.
          Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)
          8750-7587
          0161-7567
          Feb 1997
          : 82
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Laboratoire de Physiopathologie Respiratoire, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris, France.
          Article
          9049727
          bcc20d6f-f829-4ade-baf3-69dcdcc3cd29
          History

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