The effect of CO2 on ventilation and breath‐holding during exercise and while breathing through an added resistance
- 1 May 1969
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Physiology
- Vol. 201 (3) , 551-566
- https://doi.org/10.1113/jphysiol.1969.sp008772
Abstract
1. Ventilation was measured while subjects were made to rebreathe from a bag containing CO(2) and O(2) in order to expose them to a steadily rising CO(2) tension (P(CO2)). The object of the experiments was to determine the effect of a variety of stimuli upon the increase in ventilation and fall in breath-holding time which occurs in response to the rising P(CO2).2. Steady-state exercise at 200 kg.m/min resulted in a small fall in the slope of the ventilation-CO(2) response curve (S(V)) and a small, though not statistically significant, fall in the P(CO2) at which ventilation would be zero by extrapolation (B(V)). There was a marked fall in the slope of the breath-holding-CO(2) response curve (S(BH)) and an increase in the P(CO2) at which breath-holding time became zero by extrapolation (B(BH)).3. These results have been interpreted with the aid of a model of the control of breath-holding and it is suggested that there is no change in CO(2) sensitivity on exercise, either during rebreathing or breath-holding.4. An increase in the resistance to breathing caused a marked reduction in S(V) and B(V), but no change in the breath-holding-CO(2) response curve. These findings suggest that the flattening of the ventilation-CO(2) response curve is mechanical in origin and acute airway obstruction produces no change in CO(2) sensitivity.5. On the basis of these results, we suggest that more information about CO(2) sensitivity can be obtained by a combination of ventilation and breath-holding-CO(2) response curves.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- The estimation of carbon dioxide pressure of mixed venous blood during exercise.1967
- IMMEDIATE CARBON DIOXIDE STORAGE CAPACITY OF MAN1964
- Breath holding during and after muscular exerciseJournal of Applied Physiology, 1960
- Mathematical analysis of the time course of alveolar CO2Journal of Applied Physiology, 1960
- Effect of mechanical factors on respiratory work and ventilatory responses to CO2Journal of Applied Physiology, 1959
- [Regulation of ventilation during muscular exercise in man].1959
- THE RELATION BETWEEN ALVEOLAR OXYGEN PRESSURE AND THE RESPIRATORY RESPONSE TO CARBON DIOXIDE IN MANQuarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology and Cognate Medical Sciences, 1958
- Evidence Against the Existence of Specific Ventilatory Chemoreceptors in the LegsJournal of Applied Physiology, 1957
- THE EFFECT OF OBSTRUCTION TO BREATHING ON THE VENTILATORY RESPONSE TO CO21Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1956
- The role of body temperature in controlling ventilation during exercise in one normal subject breathing oxygenThe Journal of Physiology, 1955