1. Mechanical ventilation in a conscious male during exercise: a case report.
- Author
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Angus, Sarah A., Taylor, Joshua L., Mann, Leah M., Williams, Alexandra M., Stöhr, Eric J., Au, Jason S., Sheel, A. William, and Dominelli, Paolo B.
- Subjects
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CARDIOPULMONARY system physiology , *EXERCISE , *CARDIAC output , *HEART beat , *ARTIFICIAL respiration , *ENDURANCE sports training , *STROKE volume (Cardiac output) , *RESPIRATORY muscles , *LEFT ventricular dysfunction , *ECHOCARDIOGRAPHY - Abstract
We recently explored the cardiopulmonary interactions during partial unloading of the respiratory muscles during exercise. Expanding upon this work, we present a noteworthy case study whereby we eliminated the influence of respiration on cardiac function in a conscious but mechanically ventilated human during exercise. This human was a young healthy endurance-trained male who was mechanically ventilated during semi-recumbent cycle exercise at 75 Watts (W) (∼30% Wmax). During mechanically ventilated exercise, esophageal pressure was reduced to levels indistinguishable from the cardiac artefact which led to a 94% reduction in the power of breathing. The reduction in respiratory pressures and respiratory muscle work led to a decrease in cardiac output (−6%), which was due to a reduction in stroke volume (−13%), left ventricular end-diastolic volume (−15%), and left-ventricular end-systolic volume (−17%) that was not compensated for by heart rate. Our case highlights the influence of extreme mechanical ventilation on cardiac function while noting the possible presence of a maximal physiological limit to which respiration (and its associated pressures) impacts cardiac function when the power of breathing is maximally reduced. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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