After-discharge in the upper airway muscle genioglossus following brief hypoxia.
Joanne AvraamAndrew DawsonNicole FeastFeiven Lee FanMonika D FridgantAmanda KayZi Yi KoayPingdong JiaRachel GreigTherese ThorntonChristian L NicholasFergal J O'DonoghueJohn TrinderAmy S JordanPublished in: Sleep (2021)
That genioglossal after-discharge is almost entirely due to persistent firing of previously silent inspiratory SMUs provides insight into the mechanisms responsible for the phenomenon and supports the hypothesis that the inspiratory and expiratory/tonic motor units within the muscle have idiosyncratic functions.