Journal of applied physiology
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Cardiovascular response to arousal from sleep under controlled conditions of central and peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation in humans.
The cardiovascular response to an arousal occurring at the termination of an obstructive apnea is almost double that to a spontaneous arousal. We investigated the hypothesis that central plus peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation, induced by hypercapnic hypoxia (HH), augments the cardiovascular response to arousal from sleep. Auditory-induced arousals during normoxia and HH (>10-s duration) were analyzed in 13 healthy men [age 24 +/- 1 (SE) yr]. ⋯ Arousals were associated with a significant increase in mean arterial blood pressure at 5 s (P < 0.001) and with a significant decrease in the R-R interval at 3 s (P < 0.001); however, the magnitude of the changes was not significantly different during normoxia compared with HH (mean arterial blood pressure: normoxia, 91 +/- 4 to 106 +/- 4 mmHg; HH, 91 +/- 4 to 109 +/- 5 mmHg; P = 0.32; R-R interval: normoxia, 1.12 +/- 0.04 to 0.90 +/- 0.05 s; HH, 1.09 +/- 0.05 to 0.82 +/- 0.03 [corrected] s; P = 0.78). Mean ventilation increased significantly at the second breath postarousal for both conditions (P < 0.001), but the increase was not significantly different between the two conditions (normoxia, 5.35 +/- 0.40 to 9.57 +/- 1.69 l/min; HH, 8.57 +/- 0.63 to 11.98 +/- 0.70 l/min; P = 0.71). We conclude that combined central and peripheral chemoreceptor stimulation with the use of HH does not interact with the autonomic outflow associated with arousal from sleep to augment the cardiovascular response.
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The extent to which inflation of one lung increases pleural pressure around the contralateral lung could affect ventilatory function, e.g., after pneumonectomy or lung transplantation. The rise in contralateral pleural pressure is limited by mediastinal stiffness and other chest wall properties. To estimate these properties, we determined an elastance of asymmetric expansion (E(Asym)) in 20 supine adults undergoing thoracic surgery requiring endobronchial intubation. ⋯ Elastances (means +/- SD) were 13.0 +/- 8.7 (E(Asym)), 14.0 +/- 7.0 (left lung), 12.2 +/- 6.1 (right lung), and 6.7 +/- 2.1 cmH(2)O/l (chest wall). E(Asym) was high in three patients with prior cardiac surgery or mediastinal radiation therapy, suggesting that mediastinal stiffening due to scarring and fibrosis reduced pressure transmission between hemithoraxes. Simulations with a previously published model showed that changes in E(Asym) in the range of values observed could substantially affect lung ventilation after single-lung transplantation for emphysema.