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Thoracoabdominal motion during hypercapnia, hypoxia, and exercise

 

作者: K. R. Chapman,   A. Perl,   N. Zamel,   A. S. Rebuck,  

 

期刊: Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology  (NRC Available online 1985)
卷期: Volume 63, issue 3  

页码: 188-192

 

ISSN:0008-4212

 

年代: 1985

 

DOI:10.1139/y85-035

 

出版商: NRC Research Press

 

数据来源: NRC

 

摘要:

We measured, in 11 healthy volunteers, the contributions of rib cage and abdomen–diaphragm compartments to increased ventilation caused by hypercapnia, hypoxia, and exercise to determine whether different stimuli produce similar or different patterns of ventilation with respect to the motion of rib cage and abdominal compartments. Progressive hypcroxic hypercapnia and progressive isocapnic hypoxia were induced by rebreathing methods and graded exercise performed on a treadmill, and compartmental tidal volume (VT) was measured by respiratory inductive plethysmography. For each stimulus, the wide range ofVTresponses among individuals was determined primarily by the range of rib cage contributions toVT, the abdominal compartmentVTresponse slopes accounting for less of this range. There were no significant differences between hypercapnia and hypoxia in either rib cage or abdominal contributions to ventilation (for both,p < 0.3). However, exercise rib cage and abdominal contributions to ventilation were significantly different from those during chemically driven breathing: for the rib cage compartment,p < 0.0001 and for the abdominal compartment,p < 0.05. Whereas, in 8 of 10 subjects the rib cage contribution toVTduring exercise was similar to or exceeded that during rebreathing, in 7 of 10 subjects the abdomen–diaphragm contribution fell below that measured during both hypercapnia and hypoxia. There was a significant correlation between hypercapnia and hypoxia in theVTcontribution of each compartment at equivalent levels of ventilation (rib cage,p < 0.0001; abdomen,p < 0.0005), but there was no significant correlation in theVTcontribution of either compartment between exercise and hypercapnia or exercise and hypoxia. The pattern of compartmental contributions to ventilation during treadmill exercise differs significantly from that observed during chemically driven breathing.

 

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