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Journal ArticleDOI

Respiratory Adaptations in Sleep

Eliot A. Phillipson
- 01 Jan 1978 - 
- Vol. 40, Iss: 1, pp 133-156
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TLDR
The current era of research into the physiology of sleep began in 1953 when Aserinsky and Kleitman first described REMl sleep and its association with a characteristic EEG pattern, dreaming, and changes in autonomic nervous system activity including respiration.
Abstract
The current era of research into the physiology of sleep began in 1953 when Aserinsky and Kleitman (2) first described REMl sleep and its association with a characteristic EEG pattern, dreaming, and changes in autonomic nervous system activity including respiration. This important discovery demonstrated conclusively that the traditional view of sleep as a homoge­ neous state was incorrect, and indicated that preexisting observations or theories regarding sleep had to be reexamined or reinterpreted taking the stage of sleep into consideration. Accordingly much of the research in sleep physiology during the past twenty years has been directed towards a defini­ tion of the physiological differences between REM and NREM sleep and towards elucidation of the specific mechanisms and purposes that underlie the different sleep stages. In recent years these same goals have been applied increasingly to the study of respiration during sleep. To the extent that the fundamental purposes and mechanisms of sleep itself remain uncertain, so too are the purposes and mechanisms of the respiratory adaptations to sleep. Nevertheless the changes in respiration that occur in the different stages of sleep have now been studied extensively, at least in purely descrip­ tive terms. In addition, attempts have been made, although fewer in num-

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Regularly occurring periods of eye motility, and concomitant phenomena, during sleep.

TL;DR: A method of gravimetric planimetry by standard photographs offers a means to study the course of surface wounds more accurately than by clinical observation or by the pictorial record alone.
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The behavioural states of the newborn infant (a review)

TL;DR: The concept of behavioural states in the young infant has been used in two connotations: (1) as a descriptive categorisation of behaviour; and (2) as an explanation of brain mechanisms which modify the responsiveness of the infant.
Journal ArticleDOI

Occlusion pressure as a measure of respiratory center output in conscious man.

TL;DR: It is concluded that measurements of P0.1 represent a useful index of the output of the respiratory centers, independent of mechanisms that alter the respiratory pattern by affecting inspiratory duration, in particular the vagal volume-related inspiratory-inhibitory reflex.
Journal ArticleDOI

Respiratory movements and rapid eye movement sleep in the foetal lamb

TL;DR: In foetal lambs from 40 days gestation (0·27 of term) onwards delivered into a warm saline bath, apparently spontaneous breathing movements were present intermittently and became deeper and more rapid with increasing age.
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