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Featured researches published by Rishi R. Dhingra.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008

Light-Induced Rescue of Breathing after Spinal Cord Injury

Warren J. Alilain; Xiang Li; Kevin P. Horn; Rishi R. Dhingra; Thomas E. Dick; Stefan Herlitze; Jerry Silver

Paralysis is a major consequence of spinal cord injury (SCI). After cervical SCI, respiratory deficits can result through interruption of descending presynaptic inputs to respiratory motor neurons in the spinal cord. Expression of channelrhodopsin-2 (ChR2) and photostimulation in neurons affects neuronal excitability and produces action potentials without any kind of presynaptic inputs. We hypothesized that after transducing spinal neurons in and around the phrenic motor pool to express ChR2, photostimulation would restore respiratory motor function in cervical SCI adult animals. Here we show that light activation of ChR2-expressing animals was sufficient to bring about recovery of respiratory diaphragmatic motor activity. Furthermore, robust rhythmic activity persisted long after photostimulation had ceased. This recovery was accomplished through a form of respiratory plasticity and spinal adaptation which is NMDA receptor dependent. These data suggest a novel, minimally invasive therapeutic avenue to exercise denervated circuitry and/or restore motor function after SCI.


Progress in Brain Research | 2014

Cardiorespiratory Coupling: Common Rhythms in Cardiac, Sympathetic, and Respiratory Activities

Thomas E. Dick; Yee Hsee Hsieh; Rishi R. Dhingra; David M. Baekey; Roberto F. Galán; Erica A. Wehrwein; Kendall F. Morris

Cardiorespiratory coupling is an encompassing term describing more than the well-recognized influences of respiration on heart rate and blood pressure. Our data indicate that cardiorespiratory coupling reflects a reciprocal interaction between autonomic and respiratory control systems, and the cardiovascular system modulates the ventilatory pattern as well. For example, cardioventilatory coupling refers to the influence of heart beats and arterial pulse pressure on respiration and is the tendency for the next inspiration to start at a preferred latency after the last heart beat in expiration. Multiple complementary, well-described mechanisms mediate respirations influence on cardiovascular function, whereas mechanisms mediating the cardiovascular systems influence on respiration may only be through the baroreceptors but are just being identified. Our review will describe a differential effect of conditioning rats with either chronic intermittent or sustained hypoxia on sympathetic nerve activity but also on ventilatory pattern variability. Both intermittent and sustained hypoxia increase sympathetic nerve activity after 2 weeks but affect sympatho-respiratory coupling differentially. Intermittent hypoxia enhances sympatho-respiratory coupling, which is associated with low variability in the ventilatory pattern. In contrast, after constant hypobaric hypoxia, 1-to-1 coupling between bursts of sympathetic and phrenic nerve activity is replaced by 2-to-3 coupling. This change in coupling pattern is associated with increased variability of the ventilatory pattern. After baro-denervating hypobaric hypoxic-conditioned rats, splanchnic sympathetic nerve activity becomes tonic (distinct bursts are absent) with decreases during phrenic nerve bursts and ventilatory pattern becomes regular. Thus, conditioning rats to either intermittent or sustained hypoxia accentuates the reciprocal nature of cardiorespiratory coupling. Finally, identifying a compelling physiologic purpose for cardiorespiratory coupling is the biggest barrier for recognizing its significance. Cardiorespiratory coupling has only a small effect on the efficiency of gas exchange; rather, we propose that cardiorespiratory control system may act as weakly coupled oscillator to maintain rhythms within a bounded variability.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2011

Vagal-Dependent Nonlinear Variability in the Respiratory Pattern of Anesthetized, Spontaneously Breathing Rats

Rishi R. Dhingra; Frank J. Jacono; Mikkel Fishman; Kenneth A. Loparo; Ilya A. Rybak; Thomas E. Dick

Physiological rhythms, including respiration, exhibit endogenous variability associated with health, and deviations from this are associated with disease. Specific changes in the linear and nonlinear sources of breathing variability have not been investigated. In this study, we used information theory-based techniques, combined with surrogate data testing, to quantify and characterize the vagal-dependent nonlinear pattern variability in urethane-anesthetized, spontaneously breathing adult rats. Surrogate data sets preserved the amplitude distribution and linear correlations of the original data set, but nonlinear correlation structure in the data was removed. Differences in mutual information and sample entropy between original and surrogate data sets indicated the presence of deterministic nonlinear or stochastic non-Gaussian variability. With vagi intact (n = 11), the respiratory cycle exhibited significant nonlinear behavior in templates of points separated by time delays ranging from one sample to one cycle length. After vagotomy (n = 6), even though nonlinear variability was reduced significantly, nonlinear properties were still evident at various time delays. Nonlinear deterministic variability did not change further after subsequent bilateral microinjection of MK-801, an N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist, in the Kölliker-Fuse nuclei. Reversing the sequence (n = 5), blocking N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors bilaterally in the dorsolateral pons significantly decreased nonlinear variability in the respiratory pattern, even with the vagi intact, and subsequent vagotomy did not change nonlinear variability. Thus both vagal and dorsolateral pontine influences contribute to nonlinear respiratory pattern variability. Furthermore, breathing dynamics of the intact system are mutually dependent on vagal and pontine sources of nonlinear complexity. Understanding the structure and modulation of variability provides insight into disease effects on respiratory patterning.


Frontiers in Neural Circuits | 2013

Decreased Hering–Breuer Input-Output Entrainment in a Mouse Model of Rett Syndrome

Rishi R. Dhingra; Yenan Zhu; Frank J. Jacono; David M. Katz; Roberto F. Galán; Thomas E. Dick

Rett syndrome, a severe X-linked neurodevelopmental disorder caused by mutations in the gene encoding methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (Mecp2), is associated with a highly irregular respiratory pattern including severe upper-airway dysfunction. Recent work suggests that hyperexcitability of the Hering–Breuer reflex (HBR) pathway contributes to respiratory dysrhythmia in Mecp2 mutant mice. To assess how enhanced HBR input impacts respiratory entrainment by sensory afferents in closed-loop in vivo-like conditions, we investigated the input (vagal stimulus trains) – output (phrenic bursting) entrainment via the HBR in wild-type and MeCP2-deficient mice. Using the in situ perfused brainstem preparation, which maintains an intact pontomedullary axis capable of generating an in vivo-like respiratory rhythm in the absence of the HBR, we mimicked the HBR feedback input by stimulating the vagus nerve (at threshold current, 0.5 ms pulse duration, 75 Hz pulse frequency, 100 ms train duration) at an inter-burst frequency matching that of the intrinsic oscillation of the inspiratory motor output of each preparation. Using this approach, we observed significant input-output entrainment in wild-type mice as measured by the maximum of the cross-correlation function, the peak of the instantaneous relative phase distribution, and the mutual information of the instantaneous phases. This entrainment was associated with a reduction in inspiratory duration during feedback stimulation. In contrast, the strength of input-output entrainment was significantly weaker in Mecp2−/+ mice. However, Mecp2−/+ mice also had a reduced inspiratory duration during stimulation, indicating that reflex behavior in the HBR pathway was intact. Together, these observations suggest that the respiratory network compensates for enhanced sensitivity of HBR inputs by reducing HBR input-output entrainment.


Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2016

Blockade of dorsolateral pontine 5HT1A receptors destabilizes the respiratory rhythm in C57BL6/J wild-type mice.

Rishi R. Dhingra; Mathias Dutschmann; Thomas E. Dick

The neurotransmitter serotonin (5HT) acting via 5HT1a receptors (5HT1aR) is a potent determinant of respiratory rhythm variability. Here, we address the 5HT1aR-dependent control of respiratory rhythm variability in C57BL6/J mice. Using the in situ perfused preparation, we compared the effects of systemic versus focal blockade of 5HT1aRs. Blocking 5HT1aRs in the Kölliker-Fuse nucleus (KFn) increased the occurrence of spontaneous apneas and accounted for the systemic effects of 5HT1aR antagonists. Further, 5HT1aRs of the KFn stabilized the respiratory rhythms response to arterial chemoreflex perturbations; reducing the recovering time, e.g., the latency to return to the baseline pattern. Together, these results suggest that the KFn regulates both intrinsic and sensory determinants of respiratory rhythm variability.


Archive | 2013

Analysis of Ventilatory Pattern Variability

Thomas E. Dick; Rishi R. Dhingra; Yee Hsee Hsieh; Mikkel Fishman; Farhad Kaffashi; Kenneth A. Loparo; Christopher G. Wilson; Frank J. Jacono

Each breath is not generated de novo; rather, the ventilatory pattern is a continuous oscillation in which the next breath is related to the present one; and being biologic, the ventilatory pattern varies. Further, the responsiveness of respiration to sensory input is dynamic because neural mechanisms scale afferent input. Thus, ventilatory pattern variability (VPV) has deterministic properties, which may vary in health and disease. We have developed analytical tools to distinguish and assess linear and nonlinear sources of VPV. Surrogate data sets obtained by shuffling the original data while preserving its amplitude distribution and autocorrelation function and, thus, preserving linear properties embedded within the original data are used to distinguish various sources and types of VPV. Differences in mutual information and sample entropy of VPV between original and surrogate data sets reflect nonlinear deterministic properties of the original data set. We have applied these analytic techniques to assess breathing pattern before and after vagotomy, cerebral ischemia, and lung injury. Deterministic variability decreased following each of these interventions. Finally, our approach can be applied to rhythmic biological signals.


Physical Review E | 2013

Quantifying interactions between real oscillators with information theory and phase models: Application to cardiorespiratory coupling

Yenan Zhu; Yee Hsee Hsieh; Rishi R. Dhingra; Thomas E. Dick; Frank J. Jacono; Roberto F. Galán


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2017

Effects of ion channel noise on neural circuits: an application to the respiratory pattern generator to investigate breathing variability

Haitao Yu; Rishi R. Dhingra; Thomas E. Dick; Roberto F. Galán


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2017

Kölliker-Fuse nuclei regulate respiratory rhythm variability via a gain-control mechanism

Rishi R. Dhingra; Mathias Dutschmann; Roberto F. Galán; Thomas E. Dick


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Hering-Breuer evoked regulation of respiratory rhythm variability in rats (686.25)

Rishi R. Dhingra; Roberto F. Galán; Thomas E. Dick

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Thomas E. Dick

Case Western Reserve University

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Roberto F. Galán

Case Western Reserve University

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Frank J. Jacono

Case Western Reserve University

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Kenneth A. Loparo

Case Western Reserve University

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Mikkel Fishman

Case Western Reserve University

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Yee Hsee Hsieh

Case Western Reserve University

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Yenan Zhu

Case Western Reserve University

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Mathias Dutschmann

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Christopher G. Wilson

Case Western Reserve University

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