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BMC pulmonary medicine · Dec 2009
Effects of acute hypoventilation and hyperventilation on exhaled carbon monoxide measurement in healthy volunteers.
- Franco Cavaliere, Carmen Volpe, Riccardo Gargaruti, Andrea Poscia, Michele Di Donato, Giovanni Grieco, and Umberto Moscato.
- Institute of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, Rome, Italy. f.cavaliere@rm.unicatt.it
- BMC Pulm Med. 2009 Dec 23; 9: 51.
BackgroundHigh levels of exhaled carbon monoxide (eCO) are a marker of airway or lung inflammation. We investigated whether hypo- or hyperventilation can affect measured values.MethodsTen healthy volunteers were trained to achieve sustained end-tidal CO2 (etCO(2)) concentrations of 30 (hyperventilation), 40 (normoventilation), and 50 mmHg (hypoventilation). As soon as target etCO(2) values were achieved for 120 sec, exhaled breath was analyzed for eCO with a photoacoustic spectrometer. At etCO(2) values of 30 and 40 mmHg exhaled breath was sampled both after a deep inspiration and after a normal one. All measurements were performed in two different environmental conditions: A) ambient CO concentration = 0.8 ppm and B) ambient CO concentration = 1.7 ppm.ResultsDuring normoventilation, eCO mean (standard deviation) was 11.5 (0.8) ppm; it decreased to 10.3 (0.8) ppm during hyperventilation (p < 0.01) and increased to 11.9 (0.8) ppm during hypoventilation (p < 0.01). eCO changes were less pronounced than the correspondent etCO(2) changes (hyperventilation: 10% Vs 25% decrease; hypoventilation 3% Vs 25% increase). Taking a deep inspiration before breath sampling was associated with lower eCO values (p < 0.01), while environmental CO levels did not affect eCO measurement.ConclusionseCO measurements should not be performed during marked acute hyperventilation, like that induced in this study, but the influence of less pronounced hyperventilation or of hypoventilation is probably negligible in clinical practice.
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