Abstract
1 The effects of intravenous injections of alfentanil, fentanyl, phenoperidine or morphine on respiratory and peak inspiratory air flow rate, the diaphragm electromyogram (EMG), the activity recorded extracellularly from respiratory neurones located in the ventral respiratory group and the cardiovascular system were examined in anaesthetized rats. 2 Alfentanil produced dose-dependent changes in peripheral and central respiratory parameters, which were prevented by naloxone pretreatment. Minimal effects were produced on the cardiovascular system. The bradypnoea was principally due to a prolongation of the inspiratory phase and was accompanied by a comparable decrease in the peak inspiratory air flow rate. 3 Alfentanil prolonged the discharge duration of inspiratory neurones such that it still maintained a strict phase correlation with the diaphragm EMG, but changes in firing frequency were inconsistent and negligible. The action on expiratory neuronal discharge was analogous to that on inspiratory neuronal discharge but delayed in onset. 4 Hypotension produced by morphine limited the dose used but the respiratory responses to morphine and other selected narcotic analgesics were otherwise similar to that of alfentanil, differing mainly in time-course and magnitude. From the respiratory parameters assessed, the order of duration of effect was morphine > phenoperidine > fentanyl > alfentanil and the relative potencies were 0.1, 0.5, 2.5 and 1 respectively. 5 The selective prolongation of inspiration and the immediate action on inspiratory neurones suggests that systemically administered narcotic analgesics may alter the mechanisms within the central respiratory rhythm generator which determine the cessation of inspiration.