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Effects of Hypocapnic Hyperventilation on the Response to Hypoxia in Normal Subjects Receiving Intermittent Positive-Pressure Ventilation

Authors :
Daniel Rodenstein
Geneviève Aubert
Verônica Franco Parreira
Myriam Dury
Pierre Delguste
Vincent Jounieaux
UCL - (SLuc) Service de pneumologie
UCL - MD/NOPS - Département de neurologie et de psychiatrie
UCL - MD/IEPR - Institut d'éducation physique et de réadaptation
UCL - (SLuc) Service de neurologie
Source :
Chest, Vol. 121, no. 4, p. 1141-8 (2002)
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2002.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To confirm the hypothesis that the ventilatory response to hypoxia (VRH) may be abolished by hypocapnia. METHODS: We studied four healthy subjects during intermittent positive-pressure ventilation delivered through a nasal mask (nIPPV). Delivered minute ventilation (Ed) was progressively increased to lower end-tidal carbon dioxide pressure (PETCO(2)) below the apneic threshold. Then, at different hypocapnic levels, nitrogen was added to induce falls in oxygen saturation, a hypoxic run (N(2) run). For each N(2) run, the reappearance of a diaphragmatic muscle activity and/or an increase in effective minute ventilation (E) and/or deformations in mask-pressure tracings were considered as a VRH, whereas unchanged tracings signified absence of a VRH. For the N(2) runs eliciting a VRH, the threshold response to hypoxia (TRh) was defined as the transcutaneous oxygen saturation level that corresponds to the beginning of the ventilatory changes. RESULTS: Thirty-seven N(2) runs were performed (7 N(2) runs during wakefulness and 30 N(2) runs during sleep). For severe hypocapnia (PETCO(2) of 27.1 +/- 5.2 mm Hg), no VRH was noted, whereas a VRH was observed for N(2) runs performed at significantly higher PETCO(2) levels (PETCO(2) of 34.0 +/- 2.1 mm Hg, p < 0.001). Deep oxygen desaturation (up to 64%) never elicited a VRH when the PETCO(2) level was < 29.3 mm Hg, which was considered the carbon dioxide inhibition threshold. For the 16 N(2) runs inducing a VRH, no correlations were found between PETCO(2) and TRh and between TRh and both Ed and E. CONCLUSION: During nIPPV, VRH is highly dependent on the carbon dioxide level and can be definitely abolished for severe hypocapnia.

Details

ISSN :
00123692
Volume :
121
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8d25f4f8fb47c9b420b98fef0a936498
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1378/chest.121.4.1141