Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Meeting Abstracts|
September 1987
VENTILATORY SENSITIVITY TO HYPOXIA AFTER ADMINISTRATION OF AN AGONIST/ANTAGONIST
Departments of Anesthesiology, Physiology and Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, N.C. 27710
Anesthesiology September 1987, Vol. 67, A541.
Citation
E. M. Camporesi, P. Glass, R. E. Moon, E. Steinhaus, R. Wagoner; VENTILATORY SENSITIVITY TO HYPOXIA AFTER ADMINISTRATION OF AN AGONIST/ANTAGONIST. Anesthesiology 1987; 67:A541 doi: https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-198709001-00541
Download citation file:
152
Views
Citing articles via
Most Viewed
Related Articles
Activation of Opioid μ-Receptors in the Commissural Subdivision of the Nucleus Tractus Solitarius Abolishes the Ventilatory Response to Hypoxia in Anesthetized Rats
Anesthesiology (August 2011)
Sex Differences in Morphine-induced Ventilatory Depression Reside within the Peripheral Chemoreflex Loop
Anesthesiology (May 1999)
Effects of Alfentanil on the Ventilatory Response to Sustained Hypoxia
Anesthesiology (September 1998)
Influences of Morphine on the Ventilatory Response to Isocapnic Hypoxia
Anesthesiology (June 1997)
Hypoxia Induces Internalization of κ-Opioid Receptor
Anesthesiology (May 2017)