Affiliation:
1. Fondazione Toscana G. Monasterio Pisa Italy
2. Institute of Life Sciences Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna Pisa Italy
3. IMT School for Advanced Studies Lucca Italy
4. Heart Failure Unit Cardiology Guglielmo da Saliceto Hospital Piacenza Italy
5. International Center for Circulatory Health National Heart and Lung Institute Imperial College London London United Kingdom
Abstract
Background
The contribution of the lung or the plant gain (
PG
; ie, change in blood gases per unit change in ventilation) to Cheyne‐Stokes respiration (
CSR
) in heart failure has only been hypothesized by mathematical models, but never been directly evaluated.
Methods and Results
Twenty patients with systolic heart failure (age, 72.4±6.4 years; left ventricular ejection fraction, 31.5±5.8%), 10 with relevant
CSR
(24‐hour apnea‐hypopnea index [
AHI
] ≥10 events/h) and 10 without (
AHI
<10 events/h) at 24‐hour cardiorespiratory monitoring underwent evaluation of chemoreflex gain (CG) to hypoxia (
) and hypercapnia (
) by rebreathing technique, lung‐to‐finger circulation time, and
PG
assessment through a visual system.
PG
test was feasible and reproducible (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.98; 95%
CI
, 0.91–0.99); the best‐fitting curve to express the
PG
was a hyperbola (
R
2
≥0.98). Patients with
CSR
showed increased
PG
,
(but not
), and lung‐to‐finger circulation time, compared with patients without
CSR
(all
P
<0.05).
PG
was the only predictor of the daytime
AHI
(
R
=0.56,
P
=0.01) and together with the
also predicted the nighttime
AHI
(
R
=0.81,
P
=0.0003) and the 24‐hour
AHI
(
R
=0.71,
P
=0.001). Lung‐to‐finger circulation time was the only predictor of
CSR
cycle length (
R
=0.82,
P
=0.00006).
Conclusions
PG is a powerful contributor of
CSR
and should be evaluated together with the CG and circulation time to individualize treatments aimed at stabilizing breathing in heart failure.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Cited by
29 articles.
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