透视人类咳嗽反射

Stuart M Brooks
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇综述剖析了复杂的人类咳嗽反射,并对该反射的进化基础提出了假设。机械感觉诱发的咳嗽反射通过有髓鞘的 Aδ 神经纤维分支传递,不具有化学反应性(如辣椒素、缓激肽);其进化可能是为了防止胃内容物或微粒内容物吸入肺部的有害影响。从不到 1000 万年前开始,随着人类祖先对发音的适应超过了对嗅觉的适应,喉部逐渐靠近食道开口,这就变得很有必要了。第二种咳嗽反射是化学感觉型,由无髓鞘的 C 纤维传导。据推测,它的起源可以追溯到史前人类开始彼此近距离生活,并面临感染呼吸道疾病或刺激性肺损伤的风险时。后一种咳嗽的机制类似于组织损伤后诱发的疼痛;它由相同的瞬时受体电位香草酸阳离子通道(TRPV1)控制。气道通常不会因刺激而产生痛觉,但辣椒素和肺部炎症在健康人气道中引起的唯一一致反应就是咳嗽。另一种兴奋性离子通道 TRPA1 被称为 "刺激性受体",它的激活也会诱发咳嗽。这两种咳嗽的运动反应相同,都是通过膈肌、胸腹部呼吸肌、声门和部分大脑的复杂神经肌肉网络协调、精确定时和有序的呼吸事件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Perspective on the human cough reflex.

Perspective on the human cough reflex.

Perspective on the human cough reflex.

Perspective on the human cough reflex.

This review dissects the complex human cough reflex and suggests hypotheses about the evolutionary basis for the reflex. A mechanosensory-induced cough reflex conveys through branches of myelinated Aδ nerve fibers is not chemically reactive (i.e., capsaicin, bradykinin); possibly, its evolution is to prevent the harmful effects of aspiration of gastric or particulate contents into the lungs. This became necessary as the larynx moves closer to the opening of the esophagus as human ancestors adapt phonation over olfaction beginning less than 10 million years ago. The second type of cough reflex, a chemosensory type, is carried by unmyelinated C fibers. Supposedly, its origin dates back when prehistoric humans began living in close proximity to each other and were at risk for infectious respiratory diseases or irritant-induced lung injury. The mechanism for the latter type of cough is analogous to induced pain after tissue injury; and, it is controlled by the identical transient receptor potential vanilloid cation channel (TRPV1). The airways do not normally manifest nociceptive pain from a stimulus but the only consistent response that capsaicin and lung inflammation provoke in healthy human airways is cough. TRPA1, another excitatory ion channel, has been referred to as the "irritant receptor" and its activation also induces cough. For both types of cough, the motor responses are identical and via coordinated, precisely-timed and sequential respiratory events orchestrated by complex neuromuscular networking of the diaphragm, chest and abdominal respiratory muscles, the glottis and parts of the brain.

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