Dr.
Teppema and Dr. Dahan illustrated through their experiment that Hypoxia often
caused the denervation of carotid bodies. This means that the affected carotid
bodies did not harbor the ability to release neurotransmitters. The denervation
would lead to the loss of the ability to detect an action potential by the
carotid bodies. This action potential, or rather a difference in the voltage
between the membrane of the intracellular and extracellular environment is what
would originally cause the reaction by the chemoreceptive cells. If the action
potential persists or grows without a restoration of the potential back to a
restoration potential, that would lead to the loss of regulation to an extreme.
This would directly affect the working state of the Hypoxic Drive by further
disabling it and its consistency in performance. This would play a rather large
role in the secondary development of the Hypoxic Drive under the carbon dioxide
chemoreceptor driven respiratory system.
The scientists, Dr. Teppema and Dr. Dahan in fact displayed the concept
that peripheral chemoreceptors in rats and other organisms were agents of
decline in Hypoxic Ventilatory response. They charted the relative Hypoxic
Ventilatory response over time in controlled experiments and marked the
marginal decline of the response. This contends to the idea that the Hypoxic
Drive has a tendency to lose its clutch on regulation. This is a grand reason
for carbon dioxide regulation to peak and since it is a favorable trait to
organisms, it would ideally grow as a genotype.
The image above is actually a representation of action potentials that are crucial to the body and the levels at which they operate.