Increased ventilatory variability and complexity in patients with hyperventilation disorder

Author:

Bokov Plamen1,Fiamma Marie-Noëlle2,Chevalier-Bidaud Brigitte3,Chenivesse Cécile24,Straus Christian25,Similowski Thomas24ORCID,Delclaux Christophe1

Affiliation:

1. AP-HP, Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou, Service de Physiologie, Clinique de la Dyspnée, Paris, and Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Faculté de Médecine, Paris, France;

2. Sorbonne Universités, UPMC Université Paris 06, UMR_S 1158, Neurophysiologie Respiratoire Expérimentale et Clinique, Paris, France;

3. AP-HP, Hôpital Européen Georges Pompidou, Unité d'Épidémiologie et de Recherche Clinique, Paris, France;

4. AP-HP, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière Charles Foix, Service de Pneumologie et Réanimation Médicale, Paris, France;

5. AP-HP, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière Charles Foix, Service d'Explorations Fonctionnelles de la Respiration, de l'Exercice et de la Dyspnée, Paris, France

Abstract

It has been hypothesized that hyperventilation disorders could be characterized by an abnormal ventilatory control leading to enhanced variability of resting ventilation. The variability of tidal volume (VT) often depicts a nonnormal distribution that can be described by the negative slope characterizing augmented breaths formed by the relationship between the probability density distribution of VT and VT on a log-log scale. The objectives of this study were to describe the variability of resting ventilation [coefficient of variation (CV) of VT and slope], the stability in respiratory control (loop, controller and plant gains characterizing ventilatory-chemoresponsiveness interactions) and the chaotic-like dynamics (embedding dimension, Kappa values characterizing complexity) of resting ventilation in patients with a well-defined dysfunctional breathing pattern characterized by air hunger and constantly decreased PaCO2 during a cardiopulmonary exercise test. Compared with 14 healthy subjects with similar anthropometrics, 23 patients with hyperventilation were characterized by increased variability of resting tidal ventilation (CV of VT median [interquartile]: 26% [19-35] vs. 36% [28–48], P = 0.020; slope: −6.63 [−7.65; −5.36] vs. −3.88 [−5.91; −2.66], P = 0.004) that was not related to increased chemical drive (loop gain: 0.051 [0.039–0.221] vs. 0.044 [0.012–0.087], P = 0.149) but that was related to an increased ventilatory complexity (Kappa values, P < 0.05). Plant gain was decreased in patients and correlated with complexity (with Kappa 5 − degree 5: Rho = −0.48, P = 0.006). In conclusion, well-defined patients suffering from hyperventilation disorder are characterized by increased variability of their resting ventilation due to increased ventilatory complexity with stable ventilatory-chemoresponsiveness interactions.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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