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Effect of hyperoxic hypercapnia on variational activity of breathing

Authors :
Amal Jubran
Martin J. Tobin
Brydon J. B. Grant
Source :
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine. 156(4 Pt 1)
Publication Year :
1997

Abstract

Dysrhythmias of breathing occur in several clinical disorders, but their mechanistic basis is obscure. To understand their pathophysiology, factors responsible for the variability of breathing need to be defined. We studied the effect of hyperoxic hypercapnia (CO2) on the variational activity of breathing in 14 volunteers before and after delivering CO2 nonobstrusively via a plastic hood. Compared with air, CO2 increased the gross variability of minute ventilation (VI) and tidal volume (VT), and decreased that of inspiratory time (TI) and expiratory time (TE) (all p0.03). CO2 increased the autocorrelation coefficient at a lag of one breath for VI (p0.05), the number of consecutive breath lags having significant autocorrelation coefficients for VI and VT (both p0.01), and the cycle time of oscillations in VI (p = 0.03) and VT (p = 0.04). Uncorrelated random behavior constitutedor = 80% of the variance of each breath component, correlated behavior represented 9 to 20%, and oscillatory behavior represented1% during both air and CO2. CO2 increased the correlated behavior of volume components, which was accompanied by development of low-frequency oscillations with a cycle time consistent with central chemoreceptor activation.

Details

ISSN :
1073449X
Volume :
156
Issue :
4 Pt 1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....04eef28f1ab7f0db343fee58b77c0747