首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Several indices of ventilatory heterogeneity can be identified from the expiratory CO2 partial pressure or CO2 elimination versus volume curves. The aims of this study were: 1) to analyse several computerizable indices of volumetric capnography in order to detect ventilatory disturbances; and 2) to establish the relationship between those indices and respiratory system mechanics in subjects with normal lungs and in patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), both receiving mechanical ventilation. We studied six normal subjects and five patients with early ARDS mechanically ventilated at three levels of tidal volume (VT). Respiratory system mechanics were assessed by end-expiratory and end-inspiratory occlusion methods, respectively. We determined Phase III slopes, Fletcher's efficiency index, Bohr's dead space (VD,Bohr/VT), and the ratio of alveolar ejection volume to tidal volume (VAE/VT) from expiratory capnograms, as a function of expired volume. Differences between normal subjects and ARDS patients were significant both for capnographic and mechanical parameters. Changes in VT significantly altered capnographic indices in normal subjects, but failed to change ventilatory mechanics and VAE/VT in ARDS patients. After adjusting for breathing pattern, VAE/VT exhibited the best correlation with the mechanical parameters. In conclusion, volumetric capnography, and, specifically, the ratio of alveolar ejection volume to tidal volume allows evaluation and monitoring of ventilatory disturbances in patients with adult respiratory distress syndrome.  相似文献   

2.
The independent and interactive effect of feedback related to volume, CO2, inspiratory flow, and arousal state on the regulation of respiratory rate in mechanically ventilated humans is not well characterized. We examined the rate response of eight normal volunteers during both quiet wakefulness and non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep, while mechanically ventilated through a nasal mask in an assist/control mode with a machine back-up rate of 2 breaths/min. Tidal volume (VT) was set slightly above spontaneous VT and then increased by 0.2 L every 3 min up to 1.8 L or 25 ml/kg. Either an inspiratory flow of 40 L/min or an inspiratory time of 2 s (iso-T(I)) was set, with CO2 added (F(I)CO2 > 0) or F(I)CO2 = 0. Measurements were made during both quiet wakefulness and NREM sleep. We found that as VT increased, the respiratory rate decreased; the rate decline was observed during wakefulness and sleep, and under isocapnic as well as hypocapnic conditions. Increasing inspiratory flow raised the respiratory rate during wakefulness and NREM sleep. During NREM sleep, hypocapnia resulted in wasted ventilator trigger efforts. In summary, both VT and inspiratory flow settings affect the respiratory rate, and depending on state, can affect CO2 homeostasis. Ventilator settings appropriate for wakefulness may cause ventilatory instability during sleep.  相似文献   

3.
The tidal breathing flow volume loop (TBFVL) may provide objective assessments of infant airway function. We examined whether infant biologic variability and technical limitations of commercial equipment might affect tidal breathing indices. TBFVLs were obtained in 79 sleeping, healthy, 1-5-day-old infants, divided into two groups: 1) TBFVLs were obtained immediately after face mask placement, i.e., within 5-20 sec (Group A), or 2) after a delay of 2-3 min following face mask placement (Group B). Both tidal volume (VT) and respiratory rates (RR) were significantly lower (25% and 20%, respectively) in Group A than in Group B. VT mean (SD) was 4.45 (0.93) ml/kg for Group A and 6.09 (1.11) ml/kg for Group B (P < 0.0001); RR was 48.4 (12.2) min-1 and 60.0 (15.60) min-1 for Groups A and B, respectively (P < 0.0003). The time to peak expiratory flow as a ratio of total expiratory time (tPTEF:tE), purported to be a useful index of airway obstruction, was also significantly (P < 0.0001) attenuated in TBFVLs obtained immediately after face mask placement; tPTEF:tE was 0.26 (0.09) and 0.37 (0.05) in Groups A and B, respectively. Reproducibility of tPTEF:tE was affected by the timing of recordings. Intraindividual coefficients of variation were greater in Group A (36.53%) than Group B (18.82%). Similarly, significant differences were observed in mean value and variability of other indices of airway function between Groups A and B. Although they are easy to perform, we conclude that tidal breathing analyses may be significantly complicated by simple differences in measurement conditions.  相似文献   

4.
In utero hypoxia may affect the development of the brain and result in altered respiratory responses postnatally. Using a barometric plethysmograph, we examined the effects of exposing pregnant guinea pigs to 200 ppm carbon monoxide (CO) for 10 h/d from d 23-25 of gestation until term (approximately 68 d) on the ventilatory responses of their 4-5-d-old neonates at rest, and during progressive asphyxia and steady state hypercapnia. Exposure to this concentration of CO produced significantly higher levels of carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) in maternal (8.53 +/- 0.6% versus 0.25 +/- 0.1%) and fetal blood (13.0 +/- 0.4% versus 1.6 +/- 0.1%) from CO-treated animals when compared with controls. Hematocrit was significantly higher in the CO-treated neonates (46.3 +/- 1.0% versus 41.3 +/- 0.9%) at 5-6 d of age, although no difference existed between the groups for COHb at this time. There was no difference between the groups for length of gestation, litter size, or birth weight, but CO-treated neonates were significantly smaller at 4 d of age (102.4 +/- 3.7 g) compared with controls (132.0 +/- 5.0 g). At 4-5 d of age there was no difference between the groups for either tidal volume (VT), respiratory frequency (f), or minute ventilation (VE) at rest, but during steady state hypercapnia (4 and 6% CO2) the CO-treated neonates had a significantly greater VT and VE (but not f) than did controls. During progressive asphyxia, CO-treated animals had a significantly greater VT than did controls from 1-8% CO2. There was a significant fall in f at 1 and 3% CO2 in CO-treated animals; however, this effect did not persist, resulting in a significantly increased VE from 3 to 8% CO2. The inspiratory flow rate (VT/expiratory time) was significantly increased in the CO-treated neonates during progressive asphyxia; this occurred in the absence of a difference in inspiratory time between the groups. These results indicate that prenatal exposure to CO increases CO2 sensitivity in 4-5-d-old guinea pigs. This may be due to developmental alterations in the areas of the brainstem responsible for respiratory control.  相似文献   

5.
Increase in lung size has been described in acromegalic patients, but data on respiratory muscle function and control of breathing are relatively scarce. Lung volumes, arterial blood gas tensions, and respiratory muscle strength and activation during chemical stimulation were investigated in a group of 10 patients with acromegaly, and compared with age- and sex-matched normal controls. Inspiratory muscle force was evaluated by measuring pleural (Ppl,sn) and transdiaphragmatic (Pdi,sn) pressures during maximal sniffs. Dynamic pleural pressure swing (Ppl,sw) was expressed both as absolute value and as percentage of Ppl,sn. Expiratory muscle force was assessed in terms of maximal expiratory pressure (MEP). In 8 of the 10 patients, ventilatory and respiratory muscle responses to hyperoxic progressive hypercapnia and to isocapnic progressive hypoxia were also evaluated. Large lungs, defined as total lung capacity (TLC) greater than predicted (above 95% confidence limits), were found in five patients. Inspiratory or expiratory muscle force was below normal limits in all but three patients. During unstimulated tidal breathing, respiratory frequency (fR) and mean inspiratory flow (tidal volume/inspiratory time (VT/tI)) were greater, while inspiratory time (tI) was shorter than in controls. Minute ventilation (V'E) and mean inspiratory flow response slopes to hypercapnia were normal In contrast, four patients had reduced delta(VT/tI)/arterial oxygen saturation (Sa,O2) and three had reduced deltaV'E/Sa,O2. Ppl,sw(%Ppl,sn) response slopes to increasing end-tidal carbon dioxide tension (PET,CO2) and decreasing Sa,O2 did not differ from the responses of the normal subjects, suggesting normal central chemoresponsiveness. At a PET,CO2 of 8 kPa or an Sa,O2 of 80%, patients had greater fR and lower tI compared with controls. Pdi,sn and Ppl,sn related both to deltaV'E/deltaSa,O2 (r=0.729 and r=0.776, respectively) and delta(VT/tI)/deltaSa,O2 (r=0.860 and r=0.90, respectively). Pdi,sn also related both to deltaV'E/deltaPET,CO2 (r=0.8) and delta(VT/tI)/deltaPET,CO2 (r=0.76). In conclusion, the data suggest the relative independence of pneumomegaly and respiratory muscle strength. Peripheral (muscular) factors appear to modulate a normal central motor output to give a more rapid pattern of breathing.  相似文献   

6.
We evaluated the effect of global inspiratory muscle fatigue on ventilation and respiratory muscle control during CO2 rebreathing in normal subjects. Fatigue was induced by breathing against a high inspiratory resistance until exhaustion. CO2 response curves were measured before and after fatigue. During CO2 rebreathing, global fatigue caused a decreased tidal volume (VT) and an increased breathing frequency but did not change minute ventilation, duty cycle, or mean inspiratory flow. Both esophageal and transdiaphragmatic pressure swings were significantly reduced after global fatigue, suggesting decreased contribution of both rib cage muscles and diaphragm to breathing. End-expiratory transpulmonary pressure for a given CO2 was lower after fatigue, indicating an additional decrease in end-expiratory lung volume due to expiratory muscle recruitment, which leads to a greater initial portion of inspiration being passive. This, combined with the reduction in VT, decreased the fraction of VT attributable to inspiratory muscle contribution; therefore the inspiratory muscle elastic work and power per breath were significantly reduced. We conclude that respiratory control mechanisms are plastic and that the respiratory centers alter their output in a manner appropriate to the contractile state of the respiratory muscles to conserve the ventilatory response to CO2.  相似文献   

7.
To clarify the control mechanism of ventilation during posture change, ventilatory parameters, PETCO2, and ventilatory response to CO2 were examined in 11 healthy male subjects at supine (0 degrees) and 75 degrees head-up tilt positions. Minute expiratory ventilation (V.E), tidal volume (VT), respiratory frequency (f), end-tidal and transcutaneous PCO2 and CO2 output (V.CO2), and ventilatory response to CO2 were measured during a steady state condition. V.E (V.A) and VT increased significantly at 75 degrees tilt with significant decrease in PETCO2 from 40.1 mmHg (0 degrees) to about 36.1 mmHg (75 degrees). Transcutaneous PCO2 also decreased during tilt, by 3.3 mmHg. Physiological dead space (VD/VT) and V.CO2, however, remained unchanged, and ventilatory equivalent (V.E/V.CO2, V.A/V.CO2) increased significantly. The CO2-ventilatory response curve shifted upward (or leftward) without significant change in the response slope. At 75 degrees tilt, EMG activity of gastro-cnemius muscle increased. These findings suggested that PETCO2 decreased because of increased V.E (V.A) with a leftward shift of CO2-ventilatory response curve. Various signals such as afferents from lower extremities might have net stimulatory effects on a CO2-ventilation control system to reset the controlled level of PETCO2 to a lower range, but without significant change in CO2-ventilatory response during upright position.  相似文献   

8.
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptors mediate critical components of cardiorespiratory control in anesthetized animals. The role of NMDA receptors in the ventilatory responses to peripheral and central chemoreceptor stimulation was investigated in conscious, freely behaving rats. Minute ventilation (VE) responses to 10% O2, 5% CO2, and increasing intravenous doses of sodium cyanide were measured in intact rats before and after intravenous administration of the NMDA receptor antagonist MK-801 (3 mg/kg). After MK-801, eupcapnic tidal volume (VT) decreased while frequency increased, resulting in a modest reduction in VE. Inspiratory time (TI) decreased, whereas expiratory time remained unchanged. The VE responses to hypercapnia were qualitatively similar in control and MK-801 conditions, with slight reductions in respiratory drive (VT/TI) after MK-801. In contrast, responses to hypoxia were markedly attenuated after MK-801 and were primarily due to reduced frequency changes, whereas VT was unaffected. Sodium cyanide doses associated with significant VE increases were 5 and 50 microg/kg before and after MK-801, respectively. Thus 1-log shift to the right of individual dose-response curves occurred with MK-801. Selective carotid body denervation reduced VE during hypoxia by 70%, and residual hypoxic ventilatory responses were abolished after MK-801. These findings suggest that, in conscious rats, carotid and other peripheral chemoreceptor-mediated hypoxic ventilatory responses are critically dependent on NMDA receptor activation and that NMDA receptor mechanisms are only modestly involved during hypercapnia.  相似文献   

9.
We studied the amplitude, timing, and shape of the airflow waveform at the mouth of spontaneously breathing children under two sets of conditions: 1) in 30 children aged 9 wk-4.5 yr at 2, 1, and 0% inspired halothane concentration and 2) in 22 children aged 5 mo-7 yr during hyperoxic CO2 rebreathing while recovering from anesthesia. Compared with control values, the relative changes in breath parameters at 1 and 2% halothane were, respectively, as follows: total cycle time -19 and -31%, tidal volume (VT) -30 and -44%, minute ventilation -11 and -17%, and VT/inspiratory time (TI) -16 and -20%. Parameters of timing and breath shape did not change except for the significant but small increase in TI/total cycle time (by 6 and 8%, respectively). With CO2 rebreathing, parameters reflecting inspiratory drive increased significantly in all patients as shown by the slopes of the regressions of these parameters against end-tidal PCO2. Mean slopes expressed in %control value per millimeter of mercury CO2 were 12.1 for minute ventilation, 8.3 for VT, and 10.67 for VT/TI. Parameters reflecting the timing and breath shape remained essentially unchanged. Our results suggest that, in children under halothane anesthesia, the amplitude, timing, and shape of the breathing pattern are controlled independently. In particular, the amplitude and timing of the breath may vary widely without any significant change in the shape.  相似文献   

10.
BACKGROUND: The primary mechanisms of respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) are understood to be the modulation of cardiac vagal efferent activity by the central respiratory drive and the lung inflation reflex, and the degree of RSA increases with cardiac vagal activity. However, it is unclear whether RSA serves an active physiological role or merely reflects a passive cardiovascular response to respiratory input. We hypothesized that RSA benefits pulmonary gas exchange by matching perfusion to ventilation within each respiratory cycle. METHODS AND RESULTS: In seven anesthetized dogs, a model stimulating RSA was made. After elimination of endogenous autonomic activities, respiration-linked heartbeat fluctuations were generated by electrical stimulation of the right cervical vagus during negative pressure ventilation produced by phrenic nerve stimulation (diaphragm pacing). The vagal stimulation was performed in three conditions; phasic stimulation during expiration (artificial RSA) and during inspiration (inverse RSA) and constant stimulation (control) causing the same number of heartbeats per minute as the phasic stimulations. Although tidal volume, cardiac output, and arterial blood pressure were unchanged, artificial RSA decreased the ratio of physiological dead space to tidal volume (VD/VT) and the fraction of intrapulmonary shunt (Qap/Qt) by 10% and 51%, respectively, and increased O2 consumption by 4% compared with control. Conversely, reverse RSA increased VD/VT and Qap/Qt by 14% and 64%, respectively, and decreased O2 consumption by 14%. CONCLUSIONS: These results support our hypothesis that RSA benefits the pulmonary gas exchange and may improve the energy efficiency of pulmonary circulation by "saving heartbeats."  相似文献   

11.
Using the parenchymal marker technique in normal anesthetized dogs, we compared the dynamics of regional lung expansion between two ventilation strategies designed to increase mean thoracic volume. Dynamic hyperinflation (DH was produced by ventilating the lungs at a rate of 50 breaths/min and with a duty cycle of 0.5. Static hyperinflation (SH) was produced through the application of extrinsic positive end-expiratory pressure while the lungs were ventilated at a rate of 15 breaths/min and with a duty cycle of 0.15. Regional tidal volume (VT,r), regional functional residual volume, and the time delay between regional expansion and the flow signal at the common airway were computed for up to 100 regions/lobe in 5 animals. Ventilation strategy had no effect on the overall variance of VT,r within lobes. Although the VT,r measured during SH correlated with VT,r measured during DH, the average correlation coefficient was only 0.69. Ventilation rate-related differences in VT,r and regional functional residual capacity varied with the regional time delay in ways qualitatively consistent with parallel inhomogeneity of unit time constants. However, a large component of frequency-dependent behavior remains unexplained by established mechanisms. We conclude that DH and SH should not be considered equivalent lung unit recruitment strategies.  相似文献   

12.
The slope of phase 3 and three noninvasively determined dead space estimates derived from the expiratory carbon dioxide tension (PCO2) versus volume curve, including the Bohr dead space (VD,Bohr), the Fowler dead space (VD,Fowler) and pre-interface expirate (PIE), were investigated in 28 healthy control subjects, 12 asthma and 29 emphysema patients (20 severely obstructed and nine moderately obstructed) with the aim to establish diagnostic value. Because breath volume and frequency are closely related to CO2 elimination, the recording procedures included varying breath volumes in all subjects during self-chosen/natural breathing frequency, and fixed frequencies of 10, 15 and 20 breaths x min(-1) with varying breath volumes only in the healthy controls. From the relationships of the variables with tidal volume (VT), the values at 1 L were estimated to compare the groups. The slopes of phase 3 and VD,Bohr at 1 L VT showed the most significant difference between controls and patients with asthma or emphysema, compared to the other two dead space estimates, and were related to the degree of airways obstruction. Discrimination between no-emphysema (asthma and controls) and emphysema patients was possible on the basis of a plot of intercept and slope of the relationship between VD,Bohr and VT. A combination of both the slope of phase 3 and VD,Bohr of a breath of 1 L was equally discriminating. The influence of fixed frequencies in the controls did not change the results. The conclusion is that Bohr dead space in relation to tidal volume seems to have diagnostic properties separating patients with asthma from patients with emphysema with the same degree of airways obstruction. Equally discriminating was a combination of both phase 3 and Bohr dead space of a breath of 1 L. The different pathophysiological mechanisms in asthma and emphysema leading to airways obstruction are probably responsible for these results.  相似文献   

13.
To investigate the reflex mechanisms of sighs (spontaneous large breaths) (VT greater than 2 X control VT) in infants, recordings of respiratory flow and tidal volume (VT) were made during sleep. The frequency of sighs was greater at 1 than at 5 days of age, while respiratory frequency and control VT did not change. Most sighs (93%) had a biphasic pattern of inspiratory flow characterized by an inspiratory duration nearly twice that of control breaths, with an abrupt change in flow rate halfway through inspiration. Interruption of ventilation (3-7 s of airway occlusion) appeared to generate a stimulus for biphasic sighs, since sighs occurred during the first breath after termination of airway occlusion more frequently after long than after brief occlusions. However, a biphasic inspiratory pattern in airway pressure was rarely observed while the airways were occluded, regardless of occlusion duration. This suggests that increase in lung volume during the initial part of the biphasic inspiration following occlusion is a stimulus for the second part. Thus the underlying reflex mechanism of sighs in human infants appears to be the same as occurs in the so-called Head's paradoxical response to lung inflation.  相似文献   

14.
We compared the effects of two step durations on breathing pattern, mouth occlusion pressure and "effective" impedance of the respiratory system during incremental exercise. Nine normal subjects (mean age: 27.8+/-1.21 years) performed two incremental exercise tests in randomized order: one test with step increments every 1 min 30s and the other, every 4 min. After a warm-up at 25 W for the 1 min 30 s test, the power was increased by 50 W from 50 W to exhaustion. During the last minute at each power, we measured ventilation (VE), tidal volume (VT), breathing frequency (fR), inspiratory and expiratory time (TI and TE), total time of the respiratory cycle (TTOT), TI/TTOT, mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI), mouth occlusion pressure (P0.1), "effective" impedance of the respiratory system (P0.1/(VT/ TI)) and venous blood lactate concentration ([La]). Our result showed that at maximal exercise the power was significantly higher (p < 0.01) and [La] lower (p < 0.01) in the 1 min 30 s test. At 100, 150 and 200 W, the 4 min test showed significantly higher oxygen uptake (VO2), carbon dioxide output (VCO2), VE, P0.1, fR, VT/TI and HR (p <0.001) and significantly lower TI, TE and TTOT (p<0.01). [La] was significantly higher at 150 W (p<0.05) and 200 W (p<0.001). At the same VCO2, P0.1 was not significantly different between the two tests, whereas VE showed a tendency to be higher (p = 0.08) and P0.1/(VT/TI) was significantly lower during the 4 min test. In conclusion, this study allowed us to quantify the difference in inspiratory neuromuscular output and ventilatory response between 1 min 30s and 4 min tests and showed that different step durations alter the relationship between inspiratory neuromuscular output and mean inspiratory flow.  相似文献   

15.
To examine the influence of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) therapy on respiratory center drive in patients with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS), 20 normocapnic OSAS patients (group 0) and 20 simple snoring patients were studied. In the first night, diagnostic polysomnography (PSG) was performed. Before and after PSG monitoring, mouth occlusion pressure (P0.1), tidal volume (VT), minute ventilation (VE), respiratory rate (RR), inspiratory time (Ti), expiratory time (Te), total cycle duration (Ttot), inspiratory duty cycle (Ti/Ttot), mean inspiratory flow (VT/Ti) and effective inspiratory impedance (P0.1/VT/Ti, Ieff) were measured while they were breathing room air. In the following night the OSAS patients were treated with nasal CPAP and PSG monitoring and the above mentioned measurements were repeated. The results showed that pre-PSG values of P0.1, RR and P0.1/VT/Ti in the OSAS patients were significantly higher than those in the snoring patients, while VT, Ti, Te and Ttot values were lower. In the first night, the post-PSG P0.1 value in the OSAS patients increased markedly as compared with the pre-PSG. After overnight nasal CPAP therapy, the respiratory disorder index in the OSAS patients decreased markedly, the nadir SaO2 increased markedly, but the post-PSG P0.1 value did not increase significantly. It is concluded that, before sleep, OSAS patients exhibit a higher respiratory drive and a shallow and frequent breathing pattern as compared with simple snoring patients. After nocturnal sleep, the respiratory drive of OSAS patients increases significantly, the breathing pattern becomes more shallow and frequent. Nasal CPAP may effectively relieve the sleep apnea and hypopnea as well as the resulting hypoxemia and therefore correct the changes in breathing pattern and respiratory drive through nocturnal sleep in patients with OSAS.  相似文献   

16.
We have developed a new small animal model for acute inhalation studies on combined effects of cold air and gaseous urban air pollutants. The anaesthetised, tracheostomised and paralysed guinea-pig was placed inside a small, sealed whole-body-box, in which it was ventilated mechanically by using cyclic negative pressure (Pbox) for active expansion of the chest. During a 2-h normal ventilation with warm humid air (n=6), there was a need for increasing Pbox with time to maintain the fixed tidal volume (VT) of 11 ml/kg. No such need was seen in the experiments with 15-min periods of isocapnic hyperventilation at 80 and 120 breaths/min (n=13). During the 2-h normal ventilation and in experiments with hyperventilation, there was a gradual increase in heart rate and small gradual decreases in PaCO2 and pH with time. Cold air + SO2 2.5 ppm produced a significantly stronger bronchoconstriction (deltaVT=-30.3+/-7.2%, n=6, P < 0.05) than clean cold dry air (deltaVT=-10.6+/-1.3%, n=6) and cold air + NO2 2.5 ppm (deltaVT=-13.2+/-3.3%, n=6), although these three exposure conditions produced similar decreases in tracheal air and retrotracheal tissue temperatures. With the present guinea-pig model, the combined respiratory effects of cold air and gaseous urban air pollutants can be investigated in a highly controlled manner.  相似文献   

17.
Volatile anesthetics depress spontaneous ventilation in a dose-dependent manner with variations in effects among different drugs. The goal of this prospective study was to assess respiratory changes during spontaneous ventilation using desflurane/O2/N2O anesthesia in two groups of children. Both groups were undergoing minor surgery and consisted of children < 2 yr old (Group I) and children > 2 yr old (Group II). They were examined at 0.5, 1, and 1.5 minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration desflurane anesthesia. Induction of anesthesia was performed via a face mask and a mixture of O2/N2O (40:60) with halothane. At lease 20 min after stopping halothane, the respiratory variables were recorded on desflurane anesthesia. Tidal volume and minute ventilation decreased significantly (P <0.05) as desflurane increased from 0.5 to 1.5 MAC in both groups. At 1.5 MAC, the respiratory rate was greater in Group II than in Group I (P <0.05). In both groups, the increase in end-tidal CO2 was significant at 1.5 MAC versus 1 and 0.5 MAC (P <0.05). Apnea, i.e., no respiratory movement for 20 s, occurred at 1.5 MAC in one patient in each group. The respiratory duty cycle did not change in any of the groups. Both indices of paradoxical respiration--amplitude index and delay index--did not change. IMPLICATIONS: Desflurane induces respiratory depression at concentrations higher than 1 minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration mainly due to a decrease in tidal volume. Therefore, desflurane at high concentrations should be used cautiously in infants and children with spontaneous ventilation.  相似文献   

18.
In kyphoscoliosis (KS), lung volumes are reduced, respiratory elastance and resistance are increased, and breathing pattern is rapid and shallow, attributes that may contribute to defense of tidal volume (VT) in the face of inspiratory resistive loading. The control of ventilation of 12 anesthetized patients about to undergo corrective spinal surgery was compared to that of 11 anesthetized patients free of cardiothoracic disease during quiet breathing and the first breath through one of three linear resistors. Mean forced vital capacity (FVC) of the KS group was 48% that of the controls (C). Passive elastance (Ers) and active elastance and resistance (E'rs and R'rs, respectively) were computed according to previously described techniques (Behrakis PK, Higgs BD, Baydur A, Zin WA, Milic-Emili J (1983) Active inspiratory impedance in halothane-anesthetized humans. J Appl Physiol 54: 1477-1481). Baseline tidal volume VT, inspiratory duration Tl, expiratory duration TE, duration of total breathing cycle TT, and inspiratory duty cycle TI/TT were significantly reduced, while VE was slightly decreased in the KS. Ers, E'rs, and R'rs, were, respectively, 72, 69, and 89% greater in the KS. Driving pressure (Pmus) was derived from the equation of motion, using active values of respiratory elastance. With resistive loading, there was greater prolongation of TI in the C, while percent reduction in VT and minute ventilation VE was less in KS. Compensation in both groups was achieved through three changes in the Pmus waveform. (1) Peak amplitude increased. (2) The duration of the rising phase increased. (3) The rising Pmus curve became more concave to the time axis. These changes were most marked with application of the highest resistance in both groups. Peak driving pressure and mean rate of rise of Pmus were greater in the KS. Increased intrinsic impedance, Pmus, and differences in changes in neural timing in anesthetized kyphoscoliotics contribute to modestly greater VT defense, compared to that of anesthetized subjects free of cardiorespiratory disease.  相似文献   

19.
OBJECTIVE: To compare the efficacy of positive pressure ventilation applied through a mask versus an endotracheal tube, using anesthetized/paralyzed foals as a model for foals with hypoventilation. ANIMALS: Six 1-month-old foals. PROCEDURE: A crossover design was used to compare the physiologic response of foals to 2 ventilatory techniques, noninvasive mask mechanical ventilation (NIMV) versus endotracheal mechanical ventilation (ETMV), during a single period of anesthesia and paralysis. Arterial pH, PaO2, PaCO2, oxygen saturation, end-tidal CO2 tension, airway pressures, total respiratory system resistance, resistance across the upper airways (proximal to the midtracheal region), and positive end-expiratory pressures (PEEP) were measured. Only tidal volume (VT; 10, 12.5, and 15 ml/kg of body weight) or PEEP (7 cm of H2O) varied. RESULTS: Compared with ETMV, use of NIMV at equivalent VT resulted in PaCO2 and pH values that were significantly higher, but PaO2 was only slightly lower. Between the 2 methods, peak airway pressure was similar, but peak expiratory flow was significantly lower and total respiratory resistance higher at each VT for NIMV. Delivery of PEEP (7 cm of H2O) was slightly better for ETMV (7.1 +/- 1.3 cm of H2O) than for NIMV (5.6 +/- 0.6 cm of H2O). CONCLUSION: These data suggest that use of NIMV induces similar physiologic effects as ETMV, but the nasal cavities and mask contribute greater dead space, manifesting in hypercapnia. Increasing the VT used on a per kilogram of body weight basis, or the use of pressure-cycled ventilation might reduce hypercapnia during NIMV. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Use of NIMV might be applicable in selected foals, such as those with hypoventilation and minimal changes in lung compliance, during weaning from endotracheal mechanical ventilation, or for short-term ventilation in weak foals.  相似文献   

20.
Rapid eye movements during rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep are associated with rapid, shallow breathing. We wanted to know whether this effect persisted during increased respiratory drive by CO2. In eight healthy subjects, we recorded electroencephalographic, electrooculographic, and electromyographic signals, ventilation, and end-tidal PCO2 during the night. Inspiratory PCO2 was changed to increase end-tidal PCO2 by 3 and 6 Torr. During normocapnia, rapid eye movements were associated with a decrease in total breath time by -0.71 +/- 0.19 (SE) s (P < 0.05) because of shortened expiratory time (-0.52 +/- 0.08 s, P < 0.001) and with a reduced tidal volume (-89 +/- 27 ml, P < 0.05) because of decreased rib cage contribution (-75 +/- 18 ml, P < 0.05). Abdominal (-11 +/- 16 ml, P = 0.52) and minute ventilation (-0.09 +/- 0.21 ml/min, P = 0.66) did not change. In hypercapnia, however, rapid eye movements were associated with a further shortening of total breath time. Abdominal breathing was also inhibited (-79 +/- 23 ml, P < 0.05), leading to a stronger inhibition of tidal volume and minute ventilation (-1.84 +/- 0.54 l/min, P < 0.05). We conclude that REM-associated respiratory changes are even more pronounced during hypercapnia because of additional inhibition of abdominal breathing. This may contribute to the reduction of the hypercapnic ventilatory response during REM sleep.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号