Julie Wenninger
Medical College of Wisconsin
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Featured researches published by Julie Wenninger.
Respiration Physiology | 2000
Hubert V. Forster; L. G. Pan; T. F. Lowry; A Serra; Julie Wenninger; Paul Martino
This review provides a summary and prospective on the importance of carotid/peripheral chemoreceptors to the control of breathing during physiologic conditions. For several days after carotid body denervation (CBD), adult mammals hypoventilate (+10 mmHg increase in Pa(CO(2))) at rest and during exercise and CO(2) sensitivity is attenuated by about 60%. In addition, if the rostral ventrolateral medulla is cooled during NREM sleep after CBD, a sustained apnea is observed. Eventually, days or weeks after CBD, a peripheral ventilatory chemoreflex redevelops and there is a normalization of breathing (rest and exercise) and CO(2) sensitivity. The site (s) of the regained chemosensitivity has not been established. This plasticity/redundancy after CBD appears greater in neonates than in adult mammals. These data suggest the carotid and other peripheral chemoreceptors provide an important excitatory input to medullary respiratory neurons that is essential for breathing when wakeful stimuli and central chemoreceptors are absent.
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2009
Julie Wenninger; E. B. Olson; Caitlin J Cotter; Cathy F. Thomas; Mary Behan
It is clear that sex hormones impact ventilation. While the effects of the menstrual cycle, pregnancy, testosterone, and progesterone on resting ventilation have been well documented, effects of sex hormones on the hypoxic (HVR) and hypercapnic ventilatory responses (HCVR) are inconclusive. In addition, in no study have systemic sex steroid hormone levels been measured. Age and sex differences in long-term facilitation in response to episodic hypoxia were found in anesthetized rats. The purpose of the present study was to assess the effects of sex and age [young, 3-4 mo; middle age, 12-13 mo; and old, >20 mo] on the HVR and the HCVR of awake rats relative to systemic hormone levels. Based on findings from long-term facilitation studies, we hypothesized that the HVR would be influenced by both sex and age. We found no age-related changes in the HVR or HCVR. However, female rats have a greater HVR than male rats at old age, and at middle age female rats have a greater HCVR than male rats. Additionally, we found no correlation between the minute ventilation/oxygen consumption and the progesterone-to-estrogen ratio during hypoxia or hypercapnia. However, changes in ventilatory responses with age were not similar between the sexes. Thus it is critical to take sex, age, estrous cycle stage, and systemic hormone levels into consideration when conducting and reporting studies on respiratory control.
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2004
Julie Wenninger; L. G. Pan; LeeAnne Klum; Tracy Leekley; Jeff Bastastic; Matthew R. Hodges; T. R. Feroah; S. Davis; Hubert V. Forster
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2004
Matthew R. Hodges; L. Klum; T. Leekley; D. Brozoski; J. Bastasic; S. Davis; Julie Wenninger; T. R. Feroah; L. G. Pan; Hubert V. Forster
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2004
Julie Wenninger; L. G. Pan; L. Klum; T. Leekley; J. Bastastic; Matthew R. Hodges; T. R. Feroah; S. Davis; Hubert V. Forster
Journal of Applied Physiology | 1999
T. F. Lowry; Hubert V. Forster; L. G. Pan; A. Serra; Julie Wenninger; R. Nash; D. Sheridan; R. A. Franciosi
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2001
Julie Wenninger; L. G. Pan; Paul Martino; L. Geiger; Matthew R. Hodges; A. Serra; T. R. Feroah; Hubert V. Forster
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2002
Thom R. Feroah; Hubert V. Forster; Carla G. Fuentes; Julie Wenninger; Paul Martino; Matthew R. Hodges; L. G. Pan; Tom B. Rice
Respiration Physiology | 2001
Thom R. Feroah; Hubert V. Forster; L. G. Pan; Julie Wenninger; Paul Martino; Tom B. Rice
Journal of Applied Physiology | 2003
Thom R. Feroah; H. V. Forster; Carlo G. Fuentes; Paul Martino; Matthew R. Hodges; Julie Wenninger; L. G. Pan; Tom B. Rice