TY - JOUR
T1 - Mechanisms of hypoxia‐induced periodic breathing during sleep in humans.
AU - Berssenbrugge, A.
AU - Dempsey, J.
AU - Iber, C.
AU - Skatrud, J.
AU - Wilson, P.
PY - 1983/10/1
Y1 - 1983/10/1
N2 - Ventilation was studied during wakefulness and sleep in six healthy humans in normoxia (mean barometric pressure (PB) = 740 torr), and in hypobaric hypoxia (PB = 455 torr). Hypoxia caused hyperventilation and hypocapnic alkalosis (delta Pa,CO2 = ‐7 torr) during wakefulness and in all sleep states. Periodic breathing was the predominant pattern of breathing in all stages of non‐rapid eye movement (non‐r.e.m.) sleep in hypoxia, but was rarely observed during wakefulness or r.e.m. sleep. Periodic breathing was composed of repetitive oscillations of reproducible cycle length characterized by clusters of breaths with augmented inspiratory effort (VT/TI) and highly variable distribution of breath‐to‐breath minute ventilation (VE) and tidal volume (VT), which alternated regularly with prolongations of the expiratory pause of the last breath of each cluster (apnea duration = 5‐18 sec). Hypoxia‐induced periodic breathing was eliminated by: (a) acute restoration of normoxia coincident with a 3‐6 torr increase in Pa,CO2; and (b) augmented FI,CO2 (at constant arterial oxygen saturation) which rapidly and reversibly eliminated apneas and stabilized breathing pattern with a less than 2 torr increase in Pa,CO2. If hypocapnia was prevented (by augmented FI,CO2) during acute induction of hypoxia in non‐r.e.m. sleep, periodic breathing was also prevented. We propose that the genesis of hypoxia‐induced periodic breathing requires the combination of hypoxia and hypocapnia. Periodicity results from oscillations in CO2 about a CO2‐apnea threshold whose functional expression is critically linked to sleep state.
AB - Ventilation was studied during wakefulness and sleep in six healthy humans in normoxia (mean barometric pressure (PB) = 740 torr), and in hypobaric hypoxia (PB = 455 torr). Hypoxia caused hyperventilation and hypocapnic alkalosis (delta Pa,CO2 = ‐7 torr) during wakefulness and in all sleep states. Periodic breathing was the predominant pattern of breathing in all stages of non‐rapid eye movement (non‐r.e.m.) sleep in hypoxia, but was rarely observed during wakefulness or r.e.m. sleep. Periodic breathing was composed of repetitive oscillations of reproducible cycle length characterized by clusters of breaths with augmented inspiratory effort (VT/TI) and highly variable distribution of breath‐to‐breath minute ventilation (VE) and tidal volume (VT), which alternated regularly with prolongations of the expiratory pause of the last breath of each cluster (apnea duration = 5‐18 sec). Hypoxia‐induced periodic breathing was eliminated by: (a) acute restoration of normoxia coincident with a 3‐6 torr increase in Pa,CO2; and (b) augmented FI,CO2 (at constant arterial oxygen saturation) which rapidly and reversibly eliminated apneas and stabilized breathing pattern with a less than 2 torr increase in Pa,CO2. If hypocapnia was prevented (by augmented FI,CO2) during acute induction of hypoxia in non‐r.e.m. sleep, periodic breathing was also prevented. We propose that the genesis of hypoxia‐induced periodic breathing requires the combination of hypoxia and hypocapnia. Periodicity results from oscillations in CO2 about a CO2‐apnea threshold whose functional expression is critically linked to sleep state.
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U2 - 10.1113/jphysiol.1983.sp014906
DO - 10.1113/jphysiol.1983.sp014906
M3 - Article
C2 - 6417326
AN - SCOPUS:0020644378
SN - 0022-3751
VL - 343
SP - 507
EP - 526
JO - Journal of Physiology
JF - Journal of Physiology
IS - 1
ER -