Hirokazu Tojima
Chiba University
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Featured researches published by Hirokazu Tojima.
Neuroscience Letters | 1992
Leszek Kubin; Hirokazu Tojima; Richard O. Davies; Allan I. Pack
In decerebrate, paralyzed, vagotomized and artificially ventilated cats, serotonin (5-HT) and its analogues, microinjected into the hypoglossal (XII) motor nucleus, altered the activity of the genioglossal branch of XII nerve. 5-HT, carboxamidotryptamine maleate (5-CT) and DOI (1-5 mM) increased the activity by over 200%. Methysergide reversed this increase. Methysergide, mianserin, or ketanserin (100-250 nl, 1 mM) reduced the spontaneous hypoglossal activity by 20-50%. Buspirone, 8-OH-DPAT and (-)-propranolol were without effect. Thus, 5-HT provides a substantial tonic excitatory drive to XII motoneurons. The 5-HT receptors involved are likely to be type 1C or 2, but uncertainty regarding the affinity profiles of the drugs used in in vivo conditions in the cat precludes a definite identification.
Brain Research | 1993
Leszek Kubin; Hiroshi Kimura; Hirokazu Tojima; Richard O. Davies; Allan I. Pack
The depression of upper airway motor activity that develops during the rapid eye movement (REM) stage of sleep is a major factor allowing upper airway obstructions to occur in patients with sleep apnea syndrome. Microinjections of carbachol, a cholinergic agonist, into the dorsal pontine tegmentum of chronically instrumented cats produce REM sleep. In acutely decerebrate cats, carbachol induces postural atonia, eye movements and a depression of the motor output to respiratory pump and upper airway muscles. In lumbar motoneurons, the depression of activity is due to a glycinergic inhibition that has the same characteristics during natural REM sleep in chronic cats and carbachol-induced atonia in decerebrate cats (Neurophysiology, 57 (1987) 1118-1129). The mechanisms that lead to the suppression of upper airway motoneuronal activity during REM sleep are unknown. In this study, we assessed whether the depression of hypoglossal (XII) nerve activity induced by pontine carbachol injections is caused by inhibitory amino acids acting within the XII nucleus. In decerebrate, paralyzed and artificially ventilated cats, we recorded the activities of both XII nerves (genioglossal branches), one phrenic and a cervical motor branch (to monitor postural activity). Postural atonia and respiratory depression were induced by pontine carbachol injections. The inhibitory amino acid receptor antagonists, strychnine (glycine receptors) or bicuculline (GABAA receptors), were injected (100-250 nl; 1.0-2.5 mM) into one XII nucleus (the other served as control) in an attempt to reduce or abolish the depression subsequently induced by pontine carbachol. Prior to the carbachol injections, both antagonists caused similar elevations of XII nerve activity on the treated side (30-40%). However, following carbachol, the XII nerve activity on the treated side was depressed to about 25% of the (pre-antagonist and pre-carbachol) control level, whereas the depression on the untreated side was slightly greater, to 10-15% of the control. Additional injections of antagonists during the carbachol-induced depression produced no further increase in nerve activity. This minor effect of the antagonists on the carbachol-induced depression of XII nerve activity was in contrast to the marked disinhibitory effects that both antagonists had on the XII nerve response to electrical stimulation of the lingual nerve. The latter was used as a control for the ability of strychnine and bicuculline to exert disinhibitory effects within the XII nucleus. Thus, there is little, if any, contribution of these inhibitory amino acids to the depression of XII motoneurons during the carbachol-induced, REM sleep-like postural and respiratory depression; mechanisms other than fast synaptic inhibition must be involved.
Brain Research | 1994
Leszek Kubin; Clotilde Reignier; Hirokazu Tojima; Osamu Taguchi; Allan I. Pack; Richard O. Davies
The excitability of hypoglossal (XII) motoneurons innervating genioglossal muscles is markedly suppressed during the rapid-eye-movement (REM) stage of sleep. This may contribute to airway obstructions in sleep apnea patients. Based on our earlier studies in decerebrate cats using injections of carbachol into the pons to induce a REM sleep-like atonia and microinjections of serotonin (5HT) into the XII motor nucleus, we hypothesized that a sleep-related withdrawal of the serotonergic excitatory input to XII motoneurons may play a major role in these processes. To test one aspect of this hypothesis, we inserted microdialysis probes into the XII nucleus region of decerebrate, paralyzed, vagotomized and artificially ventilated cats. The probes were perfused without or with the addition of a 5HT reuptake blocker, clomipramine. The levels of 5HT and its metabolite, 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5HIAA), were determined using HPLC and electrochemical detection in dialysate samples collected over successive 20 min periods under four successive experimental conditions: control (at least 2 h after probe insertion); during the postural atonia and respiratory depression produced by pontine microinjection of carbachol; recovery from the effects of carbachol produced by pontine microinjection of atropine; and, to verify that the presence of 5HT in the dialysate was related to the activity of serotonergic cells of the brainstem, following administration of 8-OH-DPAT, a 5HT 1A receptor agonist known to suppress activity in the serotonergic cells of the raphe system. After correcting for recovery rates of individual probes, the mean control 5HT level in the extracellular space of the XII nucleus region was 7.9 +/- 4.4 nM (S.D.) in eight experiments without reuptake blockers. During the carbachol-induced depression, it was reduced to 70 +/- 20% of the pre-carbachol level. It increased to the original control level 98 +/- 27% after pontine injection of atropine. 8-OH-DPAT reduced the 5HT level to 43 +/- 14% of the post-atropine level. Changes in the 5HIAA level were not as consistent as for 5HT and did not reach statistical significance under any of the experimental conditions. Thus, a functionally significant amount of 5HT is present in the extracellular space within the XII nucleus region, and its decrement during carbachol-induced, REM sleep-like atonia is likely to reflect that occurring during natural REM sleep; this may contribute to the decreased tone of upper airway muscles and airway patency.
Brain Research | 1992
Leszek Kubin; Hiroshi Kimura; Hirokazu Tojima; Allan I. Pack; Richard O. Davies
The microinjection of carbachol into the pons of acute decerebrate cats elicits a REM sleep-like atonia and a profound suppression of respiratory motoneuronal activity (J. Appl. Physiol., 69 (1990) 2280-2289). To assess whether this suppression is mediated by medullary neurons that provide respiratory drive to motoneurons of the respiratory pump muscles (diaphragm and intercostals), we studied the effect of pontine carbachol on the activity of neurons of the ventral respiratory group (VRG) in decerebrate, vagotomized, paralyzed and artificially ventilated cats. VRG neurons were recorded extracellularly along with the activity of phrenic and intercostal (external and internal) nerves. Both inspiratory (I) and expiratory (E) VRG neurons had incrementing, ramp-like bursts of activity during their firing periods and were not vagal motoneurons. Carbachol produced a depression of the peak firing rate in most (42/57) neurons studied. However, five cells showed no change and ten had an increase in activity in spite of consistent depression at the motoneuronal level. For the total population of cells (34 I and 23 E), the peak firing was reduced to 88.5% +/- 16.3 (S.D.) of control. The simultaneously recorded phrenic activity was reduced to 77.9% +/- 11.5, while inspiratory intercostal activity fell to 63.4% +/- 21.6 and expiratory to 23.2% +/- 21.2 of control. The carbachol-induced changes in peak firing of both I and E cells were quantitatively similar, and positively correlated to changes in peak phrenic activity. Analysis of this correlation suggested that phrenic and intercostal activities will be depressed to some degree by carbachol even when the average VRG cell activity remains unchanged. In addition, our data show that VRG cells may receive a combination of inhibitory and excitatory inputs during the carbachol-induced depression of respiratory motoneurons. Thus, although some disfacilitation from VRG cells may occur, there must be additional inhibitory or disfacilitatory pathways that mediate the decrease in activity of both phrenic and intercostal motoneurons that accompanies the REM sleep-like atonia.
Neuroscience Letters | 1993
Yasuichiro Fukuda; Hirokazu Tojima; Koichi Tanaka; Tanemichi Chiba
Bilateral cooling of the parapyramidal region in the rostral ventral medullary surface (VMS) elicited a reduction in respiratory frequency and phrenic inspiratory activity in halothane anesthetized rats. A distinct cluster of neurons (nucleus parapyramidalis superficialis) was found in a superficial layer (10-15 microns from the surface) just beneath the area where cooling produced suppression of respiration. The rat VMS layer contains neural substrates which regulate the respiratory rhythm generation and inspiratory neural output.
Archive | 1992
Hiroshi Kimura; Leszek Kubin; Hirokazu Tojima; Allan I. Pack; Richard O. Davies
Sleep-related decreases in the tone of upper airway and respiratory pump muscles occur most frequently in association with the rapid eye movement (REM) phase of sleep and its characteristic postural muscle atonia12. These decreases in muscle tone may lead to upper airway obstruction and/or reduced tidal volume in patients with sleep apnea syndrome.
Sleep | 1996
Leszek Kubin; Hirokazu Tojima; Clotilde Reignier; Allan I. Pack; Richard O. Davies
Journal of Applied Physiology | 1986
Shigeru Masuyama; Hiroshi Kimura; T. Sugita; T. Kuriyama; Tatsumi K; Fumio Kunitomo; Shinya Okita; Hirokazu Tojima; Y. Yuguchi; Shohei Watanabe
Japanese Journal of Physiology | 1989
Shigeru Masuyama; Shiro Kohchiyama; Toshihide Shinozaki; Shinya Okita; Fumio Kunitomo; Hirokazu Tojima; Hiroshi Kimura; Takayuki Kuriyama; Yoshiyuki Honda
The American review of respiratory disease | 1989
Fumio Kunitomo; Hiroshi Kimura; Koichiro Tatsumi; Shinya Okita; Hirokazu Tojima; Takayuki Kuriyama; Yoshiyuki Honda