Cortical sources of the respiratory-related evoked potential.

  • Andreas Von Leupoldt
  • Andreas Keil
  • Pei-Ying S Chan
  • Margaret M Bradley
  • Peter J Lang
  • Paul W Davenport

Related Research units

Abstract

The respiratory-related evoked potential (RREP) is increasingly used to study the neural processing of respiratory signals. However, little is known about the cortical origins of early (Nf, P1, N1) and later RREP components (P2, P3). By using high-density EEG, we studied cortical sources of RREP components elicited by short inspiratory occlusions in 18 healthy volunteers (6 female, mean age 20.0+/-1.8 years). Topographical maps for Nf and P1 showed bilateral maximum EEG voltages over the frontal and centro-parietal cortex, respectively. Cortical source analyses (minimum-norm estimates) in addition to topographical maps demonstrated bilateral sensorimotor cortex origins for N1 and P2 which were paralleled by an additional frontal cortex source (p's

Bibliographical data

Original languageGerman
Article number2
ISSN1569-9048
Publication statusPublished - 2010
pubmed 20036344