Education

The effect of adding CO2 to hypoxic inspired gas

The effect of adding CO2 to hypoxic inspired gas on cerebral blood flow velocity and breathing during incremental exercise.
 
Abstract
Hypoxia increases the ventilatory response to exercise, which leads to hyperventilation-induced hypocapnia and subsequent reduction in cerebral blood flow (CBF). We studied the effects of adding CO2 to a hypoxic inspired gas on CBF during heavy exercise in an altitude naïve population. We hypothesized that augmented inspired CO2 and hypoxia would exert synergistic effects on increasing CBF during exercise, which would improve exercise capacity compared to hypocapnic hypoxia. We also examined the responsiveness of CO2 and O2 chemoreception on the regulation ventilation ([Formula: see text]E) during incremental exercise. We measured middle cerebral artery velocity (MCAv; index of CBF), [Formula: see text]E, end-tidal PCO2, respiratory compensation threshold (RC) and ventilatory response to exercise ([Formula: see text]E slope) in ten healthy men during incremental cycling to exhaustion in normoxia and hypoxia (FIO2 = 0.10) with and without augmenting the fraction of inspired CO2 (FICO2). During exercise in normoxia, augmenting FICO2 elevated MCAv throughout exercise and lowered both RC onset and[Formula: see text]E slope below RC (P<0.05). In hypoxia, MCAv and [Formula: see text]E slope below RC during exercise were elevated, while the onset of RC occurred at lower exercise intensity (P<0.05). Augmenting FICO2 in hypoxia increased [Formula: see text]E at RC (P<0.05) but no difference was observed in RC onset, MCAv, or [Formula: see text]E slope below RC (P>0.05). The [Formula: see text]E slope above RC was unchanged with either hypoxia or augmented FICO2 (P>0.05). We found augmenting FICO2 increased CBF during sub-maximal exercise in normoxia, but not in hypoxia, indicating that the 'normal' cerebrovascular response to hypercapnia is blunted during exercise in hypoxia, possibly due to an exhaustion of cerebral vasodilatory reserve. This finding may explain the lack of improvement of exercise capacity in hypoxia with augmented CO2. Our data further indicate that, during exercise below RC, chemoreception is responsive, while above RC the ventilatory response to CO2 is blunted.,
What does FICO2 stand for?
FICO2 stands for Fractional Concentration of Inspired CO2 (Carbon Dioxide)
 

Promoted Products

Meditech Brands

Meditech Equipment Co.,Ltd is part of Meditech Group. Product(s) described may not be licensed or available for sale in all countries. Sonotech, Sonovet, iSonic, FOs2pro, Dolphi, Defi, HeartRec,miniScan,Cardios,SpirOx,iBreath, Meditech and all corresponding design marks are trademarks of Meditech. The symbol indicates the trademark is registered. Patent and Trademark Office and certain other countries. All other names and marks mentioned are the trade names, trademarks or service marks of their respective owners. Please see the Instructions for Use for a complete listing of the indications, contraindications, warnings and precautions.

Legal notice Terms and conditions Cookie policy Privacy Policy Professional organisations Careers

2024© Copyright احدى فروع شركة ميديتك جروب و المركز الرئيسي الإقليمي لمنطقتي الشرق الأوسط و شمال إفريقيا | Meditech Group (Middle East branch).

Meditech Group

To Top