No Effect of Naloxone on Ventilatory Response to Progressive Hypercapnia in IDDM Patients

Author:

Wanke Theodor1,Abrahamian Heidemarie1,Lahrmann Heinz1,Formanek Dieter1,Merkle Monika1,Auinger Martin1,Zwick Hartmut1,Irsigler Karl1

Affiliation:

1. Pulmonary Department and the third Medical Department and L. Boltzmann-Research-lnstitute for Metabolic Diseases and Nutrition, Lainz Hospital; and the Department of Physics, Technical University Vienna, Austria

Abstract

The ventilatory response to hyperoxic progressive hypercapnia was examined by comparing 3 test groups: 7 diabetic patients with AN, 8 diabetic patients without AN, and 8 normal control subjects. In each group, a significant linear correlation was found between PaCO2 and VE. The slopes of the regression curves relating PaCO2 to VE were significantly steeper in the healthy control subjects and diabetic patients without AN than in those with AN (P < 0.01). We conclude that the ventilatory response to progressive hypercapnia is reduced in diabetic patients with AN. By analyzing the power spectrum and the amplitude behavior of the diaphragmatic EMG (calculated from the fc and RMS, respectively), we could exclude a disturbance of neural descending pathways and respiratory muscle dysfunction as possible causal mechanisms for the impaired ventilatory response to increasing CO2. By using lung function analysis, causal factors such as alterations in respiratory system mechanics also could be excluded. As diabetes is known to affect the endogenous opioid system, which, in turn, affects the ventilatory response to CO2, naloxone, as a specific opioid antagonist, was administered in all 3 test groups. Naloxone produced a significant increase of ventilatory response to hypercapnia in the healthy control subjects (P < 0.01), but produced no effect in either of the diabetic groups. We conclude that the ventilatory response to hypercapnia is impaired in diabetic patients with AN, that lung function alterations and diaphragmatic muscle dysfunction are not responsible for this impairment, and that endogenous opioids produce an effect on the response to CO2 in healthy subjects, but they have no effect on CO2 response in diabetic patients with or without AN. These results suggest that the central control of respiration is pathologically altered in diabetic patients with AN.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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