Neurocirculatory consequences of intermittent asphyxia in humans

Author:

Xie Ailiang1,Skatrud James B.1,Crabtree David C.1,Puleo Dominic S.1,Goodman Brian M.2,Morgan Barbara J.3

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Medicine and

2. William S. Middleton Veterans Hospital, Madison, Wisconsin 53705

3. Surgery, University of Wisconsin, and the

Abstract

We examined the neurocirculatory and ventilatory responses to intermittent asphyxia (arterial O2 saturation = 79–85%, end-tidal Pco 2 =3–5 Torr above eupnea) in seven healthy humans during wakefulness. The intermittent asphyxia intervention consisted of 20-s asphyxic exposures alternating with 40-s periods of room-air breathing for a total of 20 min. Minute ventilation increased during the intermittent asphyxia period (14.2 ± 2.0 l/min in the final 5 min of asphyxia vs. 7.5 ± 0.4 l/min in baseline) but returned to the baseline level within 2 min after completion of the series of asphyxic exposures. Muscle sympathetic nerve activity increased progressively, reaching 175 ± 12% of baseline in the final 5 min of the intervention. Unlike ventilation, sympathetic activity remained elevated for at least 20 min after removal of the chemical stimuli (150 ± 10% of baseline in the last 5 min of the recovery period). Intermittent asphyxia caused a small, but statistically significant, increase in heart rate (64 ± 4 beats/min in the final 5 min of asphyxia vs. 61 ± 4 beats/min in baseline); however, this increase was not sustained after the return to room-air breathing. These data demonstrate that relatively short-term exposure to intermittent asphyxia causes sympathetic activation that persists after removal of the chemical stimuli. This carryover effect provides a potential mechanism whereby intermittent asphyxia during sleep could lead to chronic sympathetic activation in patients with sleep apnea syndrome.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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