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RECORD NUMBER: 94 OF 167

Main Title New Frontiers in Respiratory Control XIth Annual Oxford Conference on Modeling and Control of Breathing / [electronic resource] :
Type EBOOK
Author Homma, Ikuo.
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Onimaru, Hiroshi.
Fukuchi, Yoshinosuke.
Publisher Springer New York,
Year Published 2010
Call Number RC321-580
ISBN 9781441956927
Subjects Medicine ; Human physiology ; Neurosciences ; Neurobiology
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-5692-7
Edition 1.
Collation XXVI, 382 p. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
I Comparative Aspects -- II Development -- III Modeling -- IV Respiratory rhythm generation -- V Neuromodulation -- VI Respiratory rhythm & motor pattern generation -- VII Hypoxic sensing -- VIII Integrative aspect of control of breathing -- IX Sleep apnea -- X Muscle and exercise -- XI Higher brain function and Dyspnea. Breathing is performed by the rhythmic contraction of respiratory muscles. It ma- tains homeostasis of the organism by taking in the oxygen necessary to live and work and by controlling the level of CO within the organism. At first glance, breathing 2 seems simple; however, it is produced by a complex system in the brain with various afferents and efferents. The control of breathing is of the utmost importance in s- taining life, and although more than 150 years have passed since research on brea- ing control was first begun, many unsolved mysteries still remain. Breathing is like watching the tides at a beach that are created by the vast, complex open sea. The first Oxford Conference on Modeling and Control of Breathing was held 30 years ago in September of 1978 at the University Laboratory of Physiology in Oxford, England. During this first conference, the participants engaged in a hot d- cussion on the problem of whether breathing rhythm was produced by pacemaker cells or a neural network. This was before the discovery of the Bötinger complex in the medulla, and at the time, central chemoreceptive areas were still the focus of research. This conference was an especially unforgettable moment in the dawning of the new age of respiratory research. It has since been held every 3 years in various countries around the globe and is widely appreciated as the best respiratory meeting in the world.