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Reduced tidal volume increases 'air hunger' at fixed PCO2 in ventilated quadriplegics

Authors :
Robert W. Lansing
Richard M. Schwartzstein
Harold L. Manning
Robert B. Banzett
Steven Shea
Robert Brown
Source :
Respiration physiology. 90(1)
Publication Year :
1992

Abstract

The act of breathing diminishes the discomfort associated with hypercapnia and breath-holding. To investigate the mechanisms involved in this effect, we studied the effect of tidal volume (V T ) on CO 2 -evoked air hunger in 5 high-level quadriplegic subjects whose ventilatory capacity was negligible, and who lacked sensory information from the chest wall. Subjects were ventilated at constant frequency with a hyperoxic gas mixture, and end-tidal P CO 2 was maintained at a constant but elevated level. V T was varied between the subjects' normal V T and a smaller V T . Subjects used a category scale to rate their respiratory discomfort or ‘air hunger’ at 30–40 sec intervals. In 4 of 5 subjects there was a strong inverse relationship between breath size and air hunger ratings. The quality of the sensation associated with reduced V T was nearly identical to that previously experienced with CO 2 alone. We conclude that afferent information from the lungs and upper airways is sufficient to modify the sensation of air hunger.

Details

ISSN :
00345687
Volume :
90
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Respiration physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....afb0ae4767d8643514cfcd97cd019914