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1.
This study compared the respiratory responses to ventilatory loading in 8 normal subjects and 11 quadriplegic patients with low cervical spinal cord transection. Progressive hypercapnia was produced by rebreathing. Rebreathing trials were carried out with no added load and with inspiratory resistive loads of 5 and 16 cmH2O. l-1 X s. Measurements were made of ventilation and of diaphragmatic electromyographic activity. Base-line hypercapnic ventilatory responses were significantly lower than normal in the quadriplegic patients, but the effects of resistive loading on the ventilatory responses were comparable in the two groups. The change in peak moving-average diaphragmatic electrical activity (DI peak) for a given change in CO2 partial pressure (PCO2) and DI peak at PCO2 55 Torr increased significantly with resistive loading both in the normal subjects and the quadriplegic patients. In the normal subjects, but not in the quadriplegic patients, inspiratory duration increased progressively with increasing resistance. The increase in DI peak during ventilatory loading in the normal subjects was a consequence of inspiratory prolongation. In contrast, in the quadriplegic patients during breathing against the larger resistive load, there was a significant increase in the average rate of rise (DI peak divided by the time from onset to peak) of diaphragmatic activity. The change in DI rate of rise for a given change in PCO2 increased to 137 +/- 13% (SE), and the DI rate of rise at PCO2 55 Torr increased to 128 +/- 8% (SE) of control values. These results indicate that compensatory increases in diaphragmatic activation during ventilatory loading occur in quadriplegic patients in whom afferent feedback from rib cage receptors is disrupted.  相似文献   

2.
The ventilatory effects of inspiratory flow-resistive loading and increased chemical drive were measured in ten neonates during progressive hypercapnia in control and loaded states. Hypercapnia (mean increase PCO2 = 15-20) resulted from inspiring 8% CO2 in room air and inspiratory loading by a flow-resistive load = 100 cmH2O X l-1) X s. Hypercapnia produced an increase in group minute ventilation secondary to increasing tidal volumes and breathing frequencies. Loading shifted the minute ventilation-CO2 response to the right, and slopes decreased significantly (P less than 0.05) consequent to a significant decrease in the frequency-CO2 slopes (P less than 0.05), which became negative in four of the ten subjects. Mouth pressure measured at 100 ms after onset of inspiratory effort (P100) occlusion pressure-CO2 slopes measured in five subjects showed no significant increase with load application. Resistive loading produced significant increases in inspiratory time (P less than 0.02) and the inspiratory time/total breath time ratio (P less than 0.01). Airway occlusion elicited the Hering-Breuer reflex, with a significant increase in inspiratory time-to-total breath time ratio (P less than 0.01). The results show that the inspiratory resistive load produced ventilatory compromise in newborns and insufficient compensatory augmentation of central drive.  相似文献   

3.
The purposes of the present study were to determine the changes in functional residual capacity (FRC) during inspiratory loading and to examine their mechanisms. We studied seven normal subjects seated in a body plethysmograph. In both graded inspiratory elastic (35, 48, and 68 cmH2O/l) and resistive (21, 86, and 192 cmH2O.l-1.s) loading, FRC invariably decreased from control FRC and phasic expiratory activity increased. The reduction in FRC was greater with greater loads. A single inspiratory effort against an inspiratory occlusion at three different target mouth pressures (-25, -50, and -75 cmH2O) and durations (1, 2, and 5 s) also resulted in a decrease in FRC with an increase in expiratory electromyogram activity in the following expiration. The decrease in FRC was greater with greater target pressure and duration. This decrease in FRC is qualitatively similar to that during inspiratory loaded breathing, and we suspect that the same mechanisms are at work. Because neither vagal nor chemoreceptor reflex can account for these responses, we suspect conscious awareness of breathing or behavioral control to be responsible. In an additional study, the sensation of discomfort of breathing during elastic loading decreased with a decrease in FRC. These results suggest that the reduced FRC may be due to behavioral control of breathing to reduce the sensation of dyspnea during inspiratory loading.  相似文献   

4.
Ventilatory responses to isocapnic hypoxia, with and without an inspiratory elastic load (12.1 cmH2O/l), were measured in seven healthy subjects using a rebreathing technique. During each experiment, the end-tidal PCO2 was held constant using a variable-speed pump to draw gas from the rebreathing bag through a CO2 absorbing bypass. Studies with and without the load were performed in a formally randomized order for each subject. Linear regressions for rise in ventilation against fall in SaO2 were calculated. The range of unloaded responses was 0.74-1.38 1/min per 1% fall in SaO2 and loaded responses 0.71-1.56 1/min per 1% fall in SaO2. Elastic loading did not significantly alter the ventilatory response to progressive hypoxia (P greater than 0.2). In all subjects there was, however, a change in breathing pattern during loading, whereby increments in ventilation were attained by smaller tidal volumes and higher frequencies than in the control experiments. These results support the hypothesis previously proposed in our studies of resistive loading during progressive hypoxia, that a similar control pathway appears to be involved in response to the application of loads to breathing, whether ventilation is stimulated by hypoxia or hypercapnia.  相似文献   

5.
We investigated the respiratory muscle contribution to inspiratory load compensation by measuring diaphragmatic and intercostal electromyograms (EMGdi and EMGic), transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi), and thoracoabdominal motion during CO2 rebreathing with and without 15 cmH2O X l-1 X s inspiratory flow resistance (IRL) in normal sitting volunteers. During IRL compared with control, Pdi measured during airflow and during airway occlusion increased for a given change in CO2 partial pressure and EMGdi, and there was a greater decrease in abdominal (AB) end expiratory anteroposterior dimensions with increased expiratory gastric pressure (Pga), this leading to an inspiratory decline in Pga with outward AB movement, indicating a passive component to the descent of the abdomen-diaphragm. The response of EMGic to IRL was similar to that of EMGdi, though rib cage (RC)-Pga plots did infer intercostal muscle contribution. We conclude that during CO2 rebreathing with IRL there is improved diaphragmatic neuromuscular coupling, the prolongation of inspiration promoting a force-velocity advantage, and increased AB action serving to optimize diaphragm length and configuration, as well as to provide its own passive inspiratory action. Intercostal action provides increased assistance also. Therefore, compensation for inspiratory resistive loads results from the combined and integrated effort of all respiratory muscle groups.  相似文献   

6.
To assess the effect of the normal respiratory resistive load on ventilation (VE) and respiratory motor output during exercise, we studied the effect of flow-proportional pressure assist (PA) (2.2 cmH2O.l-1.s) on various ventilatory parameters during progressive exercise to maximum in six healthy young men. We also measured dynamic lung compliance (Cdyn) and lung resistance (RL) and calculated the time course of respiratory muscle pressure (Pmus) during the breath in the assisted and unassisted states at a sustained exercise level corresponding to 70-80% of the subject's maximum O2 consumption. Unlike helium breathing, resistive PA had no effect on VE or any of its subdivisions partly as the result of an offsetting increase in RL (0.78 cmH2O.1-1.s) and partly to a reduction in Pmus. These results indicate that the normal resistive load does not constrain ventilation during heavy exercise. Furthermore, the increase in exercise ventilation observed with helium breathing, which is associated with much smaller degrees of resistive unloading (ca. -0.6 cmH2O.l-1.s), is likely the result of factors other than respiratory muscle unloading. The pattern of Pmus during exercise with and without unloading indicates that the use of P0.1 as an index of respiratory motor output under these conditions may result in misleading conclusions.  相似文献   

7.
Eight healthy young men underwent two separate steady-state incremental exercise runs within the aerobic range on a treadmill with alternating periods of breathing with no load (NL) and with an inspiratory resistive load (IRL) of approximately 12 cmH2O.1-1.s. End-tidal PCO2 was maintained constant throughout each run at the eucapnic or a constant hypercapnic level by adding 0-5% CO2 to the inspired O2. Hypercapnia caused a steepening, as well as upward shift, relative to the corresponding eucapnic ventilation-CO2 output (VE - VCO2) relationship in NL and IRL. Compared with NL, the VE - VCO2 slope was depressed by IRL, more so in hypercapnic [-19.0 +/- 3.4 (SE) %] than in eucapnic exercise (-6.0 +/- 2.0%), despite a similar increase in the slope of the occlusion pressure at 100 ms - VCO2 (P100 - VCO2) relationship under both conditions. The steady-state hypercapnic ventilatory response at rest was markedly depressed by IRL (-22.6 +/- 7.5%), with little increase in P100 response. For a given inspiratory load, breathing pattern responses to separate or combined hypercapnia and exercise were similar. During IRL, VE was achieved by a greater tidal volume (VT) and inspiratory duty cycle (TI/TT) along with a lower mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI). The increase in TI/TT was solely because of a prolongation of inspiratory time (TI) with little change in expiratory duration for any given VT. The ventilatory and breathing pattern responses to IRL during CO2 inhalation and exercise are in favor of conservation of respiratory work.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
Inspiratory muscle forces and endurance in maximum resistive loading   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The ability of the respiratory muscles to sustain ventilation against increasing inspiratory resistive loads was measured in 10 normal subjects. All subjects reached a maximum rating of perceived respiratory effort and at maximum resistance showed signs of respiratory failure (CO2 retention, O2 desaturation, and rib cage and abdominal paradox). The maximum resistance achieved varied widely (range 73-660 cmH2O X l-1 X s). The increase in O2 uptake (delta Vo2) associated with loading was linearly related to the integrated mouth pressure (IMP): delta Vo2 = 0.028 X IMP + 19 ml/min (r = 0.88, P less than 0.001). Maximum delta Vo2 was 142 ml/min +/- SD 68 ml/min. There were significant (P less than 0.05) relationships between the maximum voluntary inspiratory pressure against an occluded airway (MIP) and both maximum IMP (r = 0.80) and maximum delta Vo2 (r = 0.76). In five subjects, three imposed breathing patterns were used to examine the effect of different patterns of respiratory muscle force deployment. Increasing inspiratory duration (TI) from 1.5 to 3.0 and 6.0 s, at the same frequency of breathing (5.5 breaths/min) reduced peak inspiratory pressure and increased the maximum resistance tolerated (190, 269, and 366 cmH2O X l-1 X s, respectively) and maximum IMP (2043, 2473, and 2913 cmH2O X s X min-1, but the effect on maximum delta Vo2 was less consistent (166, 237, and 180 ml/min). The ventilatory endurance capacity and the maximum O2 uptake of the respiratory muscles are related to the strength of the inspiratory muscles, but are also modified through the pattern of force deployment.  相似文献   

9.
Eight healthy volunteers performed gradational tests to exhaustion on a mechanically braked cycle ergometer, with and without the addition of an inspiratory resistive load. Mean slopes for linear ventilatory responses during loaded and unloaded exercise [change in minute ventilation per change in CO2 output (delta VE/delta VCO2)] measured below the anaerobic threshold were 24.1 +/- 1.3 (SE) = l/l of CO2 and 26.2 +/- 1.0 l/l of CO2, respectively (P greater than 0.10). During loaded exercise, decrements in VE, tidal volume, respiratory frequency, arterial O2 saturation, and increases in end-tidal CO2 tension were observed only when work loads exceeded 65% of the unloaded maximum. There was a significant correlation between the resting ventilatory response to hypercapnia delta VE/delta PCO2 and the ventilatory response to VCO2 during exercise (delta VE/delta VCO2; r = 0.88; P less than 0.05). The maximal inspiratory pressure generated during loading correlated with CO2 sensitivity at rest (r = 0.91; P less than 0.05) and with exercise ventilation (delta VE/delta VCO2; r = 0.83; P less than 0.05). Although resistive loading did not alter O2 uptake (VO2) or heart rate (HR) as a function of work load, maximal VO2, HR, and exercise tolerance were decreased to 90% of control values. We conclude that a modest inspiratory resistive load reduces maximum exercise capacity and that CO2 responsiveness may play a role in the control of breathing during exercise when airway resistance is artificially increased.  相似文献   

10.
We studied minute ventilation, breathing pattern, end-tidal CO2 partial pressure (PACO2), and tracheal occlusion pressure in cats anesthetized with ketamine (40 and 80 mg/kg) before and after CO2 inhalation. Before CO2 administration ventilation was reduced and PACO2 increased relative to unanesthetized cats at both ketamine doses. Breathing pattern was of the "apneustic" type, being characterized by 1) prolonged inspiratory duration and relatively short expiratory time and 2) markedly curvilinear (convex upward) inspiratory volume-time profile. The latter reflected a similar curvilinearity in the tracheal occlusion pressure waveform. During CO2 inhalation, the ventilatory response to CO2 was similar to that in unanesthetized cats in spite of a depressed tracheal occlusion pressure response. This discrepancy was due to the fact that in the presence of a convex upward inspiratory volume-time profile, the shortening of inspiratory duration with increasing CO2 results in a marked increase of mean inspiratory flow, and hence the ventilatory response to CO2 remains high.  相似文献   

11.
We investigated the effect of acute and sustained inspiratory resistive loading (IRL) on the activity of expiratory abdominal muscles (EMGab) and the diaphragm (EMGdi) and on ventilation during wakefulness and non-rapid-eye-movement (NREM) sleep in healthy subjects. EMGdi and EMGab were measured with esophageal and transcutaneous electrodes, respectively. During wakefulness, EMGdi increased in response to acute loading (18 cmH2O.l-1.s) (+23%); this was accompanied by preservation of tidal volume (VT) and minute ventilation (VE). During NREM sleep, no augmentation was noted in EMGdi or EMGab. Inspiratory time (TI) was prolonged (+5%), but this was not sufficient to prevent a decrease in both VT and VE (-21 and -20%, respectively). During sustained loading (12 cmH2O.l-1 s) in NREM sleep, control breaths (C) were compared with the steady-state loaded breaths (SS) defined by breaths 41-50. Steady-state IRL was associated with augmentation of EMGdi (12%) and EMGab (50%). VT returned to control levels, expiratory time shortened, and breathing frequency increased. The net result was the increase in VE above control levels (+5%, P less than 0.01). No change was noted in end-tidal CO2 or O2. We concluded that 1) wakefulness is a prerequisite for immediate load compensation (in its absence, TI prolongation is the only compensatory response) and 2) during sustained IRL, the augmentation of EMGdi and EMGab can lead to complete ventilatory recovery without measurable changes in chemical stimuli.  相似文献   

12.
The physiological mechanisms mediating the detection of mechanical loads are unknown. This is, in part, due to the lack of an animal model of load detection that could be used to investigate specific sensory systems. We used American Foxhounds with tracheal stomata to behaviorally condition the detection of inspiratory occlusion and graded resistive loads. The resistive loads were presented with a loading manifold connected to the inspiratory port of a non-rebreathing valve. The dogs signaled detection of the load by lifting their front paw off a lever. Inspiratory occlusion was used as the initial training stimulus, and the dogs could reliably respond within the first or second inspiratory effort to 100% of the occlusion presentations after 13 trials. Graded resistances that spanned the 50% detection threshold were then presented. The detection threshold resistances (delta R50) were 0.96 and 1.70 cmH2O.l-1.s. Ratios of delta R50 to background resistance were 0.15 and 0.30. The near-threshold resistive loads did not significantly change expired PCO2 or breathing patterns. These results demonstrate that dogs can be conditioned to reliably and specifically signal the detection of graded inspiratory mechanical loads. Inspiration through the tracheal stoma excludes afferents in the upper extrathoracic trachea, larynx, pharynx, nasal passages, and mouth from mediating load detection in these dogs. It is unknown which remaining afferents (vagal or respiratory muscle) are responsible for load detection.  相似文献   

13.
In healthy subjects, we compared the effects of an expiratory (ERL) and an inspiratory (IRL) resistive load (6 cmH2O.l-1.s) with no added resistive load on the pattern of respiratory muscle recruitment during exercise. Fifteen male subjects performed three exercise tests at 40% of maximum O2 uptake: 1) with no-added-resistive load (control), 2) with ERL, and 3) with IRL. In all subjects, we measured breathing pattern and mouth occlusion pressure (P0.1) from the 3rd min of exercise, in 10 subjects O2 uptake (VO2), CO2 output (VCO2), and respiratory exchange ratio (R), and in 5 subjects we measured gastric (Pga), pleural (Ppl), and transdiaphragmatic (Pdi) pressures. Both ERL and IRL induced a high increase of P0.1 and a decrease of minute ventilation. ERL induced a prolongation of expiratory time with a reduction of inspiratory time (TI), mean expiratory flow, and ratio of inspiratory to total time of the respiratory cycle (TI/TT). IRL induced a prolongation of TI with a decrease of mean inspiratory flow and an increase of tidal volume and TI/TT. With ERL, in two subjects, Pga increased and Ppl decreased more during inspiration than during control suggesting that the diaphragm was the most active muscle. In one subject, the increases of Ppl and Pga were weak; thus Pdi increased very little. In the two other subjects, Ppl decreased more during inspiration but Pga also decreased, leading to a decrease of Pdi. This suggests a recruitment of abdominal muscles during expiration and of accessory and intercostal muscles during inspiration. With IRL, in all subjects, Ppl again decreased more, Pga began to decrease until 40% of TI and then increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

14.
During resting breathing, expiration is characterized by the narrowing of the vocal folds which, by increasing the expiratory resistance, raises mean lung volume and airway pressure. This is even more pronounced in the neonatal period, during which expirations with short complete airway closure are commonly occurring. We asked to which extent differences in expiratory flow pattern may modify the inspiratory impedance of the respiratory system. To this aim, newborn puppies, piglets, and adult rats were anesthetized, paralyzed, and ventilated with different expiratory patterns, (a) no expiratory load, (b) expiratory resistive load, and (c) end-inspiratory pause. The stroke volume of the ventilator and inspiratory and expiratory times were maintained constant, and the loads were adjusted in such a way that inflation always started from the resting volume of the respiratory system. After 1 min of each ventilatory pattern, mean inspiratory impedance and compliance of lung and respiratory system were measured. The values were unchanged or minimally altered by changing the type of ventilation. We conclude that the expiratory laryngeal loading is not primarily aimed to decrease the work of breathing. It is conceivable that the expiratory pattern is oriented to increase and control mean airway pressure in the regulation of pulmonary fluid reabsorption, distribution of ventilation, and diffusion of gases.  相似文献   

15.
To overcome the problem of altered breathing strategy during resistive ventilatory muscle training (VMT), we used a single-orifice inspiratory resistance together with a target feedback device (TFD) in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). In a preliminary study (study A), we showed that the resistance plus TFD was effective in controlling breathing strategy. We subsequently used the resistor plus TFD in a 5-wk study (study B) of VMT in 17 COPD patients who were randomized into high-intensity (HI) and low-intensity (LI) training groups. Compared with the LI group, the HI group showed significant increases in static maximal inspiratory pressure (21.3 vs. 5.0 cmH2O), maximal sustained ventilatory capacity (MSVC, 3.2 vs -0.1 l/min, sustained maximal mouth pressure (12.1 vs. 0.6 cmH2O), mean mouth pressure (6.9 vs. 3.9 cmH2O), peak inspiratory flow rate (12.3 vs. 4.0 l/min), and maximal sustained work rate (12.2 vs. 4.2 cmH2O.l-1.min-1). We conclude that targeted VMT with control of breathing strategy improves both ventilatory muscle strength and endurance.  相似文献   

16.
The objective of this study was to determine the stability of the function describing subjects' magnitude estimates of added inspiratory resistive loads following short-term exposure (STE) to a high but nonfatiguing, inspiratory load. Four inspiratory resistive loads (8.9-35.7 cmH2O X l-1 X s) were presented twice each in random order. Subjects were asked to estimate load magnitude by force of handgrip. Perceptual performance was quantified using Stevens power law, psi = k phi n, where psi is the subject's estimate, k is a constant, and phi is the peak mouth pressure developed against the load. The exponent n represents the slope of the line in the plot of log psi vs. log phi. After a 2-min period in which subjects were required to generate 80% of their maximum inspiratory pressure against a high resistance, the load estimation protocol was repeated. Estimates were significantly reduced compared to control; however, there was no significant difference in the exponent for magnitude functions between conditions. Similar results were obtained in a second parallel experiment involving magnitude estimation of weights lifted by the elbow flexors. The results suggest plasticity in the mechanism(s) subserving sensation of added loads to breathing and that such plasticity is a general feature of sensation arising from nonrespiratory muscles as well.  相似文献   

17.
Ventilatory responses to progressive exercise, with and without an inspiratory elastic load (14.0 cmH2O/l), were measured in eight healthy subjects. Mean values for unloaded ventilatory responses were 24.41 +/- 1.35 (SE) l/l CO2 and 22.17 +/- 1.07 l/l O2 and for loaded responses were 24.15 +/- 1.93 l/l CO2 and 20.41 +/- 1.66 l/l O2 (P greater than 0.10, loaded vs. unloaded). At levels of exercise up to 80% of maximum O2 consumption (VO2max), minute ventilation (VE) during inspiratory elastic loading was associated with smaller tidal volume (mean change = 0.74 +/- 0.06 ml; P less than 0.05) and higher breathing frequency (mean increase = 10.2 +/- 0.98 breaths/min; P less than 0.05). At levels of exercise greater than 80% of VO2max and at exhaustion, VE was decreased significantly by the elastic load (P less than 0.05). Increases in respiratory rate at these levels of exercise were inadequate to maintain VE at control levels. The reduction in VE at exhaustion was accompanied by significant decreases in O2 consumption and CO2 production. The changes in ventilatory pattern during extrinsic elastic loading support the notion that, in patients with fibrotic lung disease, mechanical factors may play a role in determining ventilatory pattern.  相似文献   

18.
Response of normal subjects to inspiratory resistive unloading   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The purpose of this study was to examine the role of the normal inspiratory resistive load in the regulation of respiratory motor output in resting conscious humans. We used a recently described device (J. Appl. Physiol. 62: 2491-2499, 1987) to make mouth pressure during inspiration positive and proportional to inspiratory flow, thus causing inspiratory resistive unloading (IRUL); the magnitude of IRUL (delta R = -3.0 cmH2O.1(-1).s) was set so as to unload most (approximately 86% of the normal inspiratory resistance. Six conscious normal humans were studied. Driving pressure (DP) was calculated according to the method of Younes et al. (J. Appl. Physiol. 51: 963-1001, 1981), which provides the equivalent of occlusion pressure at functional residual capacity throughout the breath. IRUL resulted in small but significant changes in minute ventilation (0.6 1/min) and in end-tidal CO2 concentration (-0.11%) with no significant change in tidal volume or respiratory frequency. There was a significant shortening of the duration (neural inspiratory time) of the rising phase of the DP waveform and the shape of the rising phase became more convex to the time axis. There was no change in the average rate of rise of DP or in the duration or shape of the declining phase. We conclude that 1) the normal inspiratory resistance is an important determinant of the duration and shape of the rising phase of DP and 2) the neural responses elicited by the normal inspiratory resistance are similar to those observed with added inspiratory resistive loads.  相似文献   

19.
We studied 10 male subjects who were administered chlormadinone acetate (CMA), a potent synthetic progesterone, to clarify the physiological basis of its respiratory effects. Arterial blood gas tension, resting ventilation, and respiratory drive assessed by ventilatory and occlusion pressure response to CO2 with and without inspiratory flow-resistive loading were measured before and 4 wk after CMA administration. In all subjects, arterial PCO2 decreased significantly by 5.7 +/- 0.6 (SE) Torr with an increase in minute ventilation by 1.8 +/- 0.6 l X min-1, whereas no significant changes were seen in O2 uptake. During unloaded conditions, both slopes of occlusion pressure and ventilatory response to CO2 increased, being statistically significant in the former but showing nonsignificant trends in the latter. Furthermore, inspiratory flow-resistive loading (16 cmH2O X l(-1) X s) increased both slopes more markedly after CMA. The magnitudes of load compensation, assessed by the ratio of loaded to unloaded slope of the occlusion pressure response curve, were increased significantly. We concluded CMA is a potent respiratory stimulant that increases the CO2 chemosensitivity and neuromechanical drives in the load-compensation mechanism.  相似文献   

20.
Effects of expiratory resistive loading on the sensation of dyspnea   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
To determine whether an increase in expiratory motor output accentuates the sensation of dyspnea (difficulty in breathing), the following experiments were undertaken. Ten normal subjects, in a series of 2-min trials, breathed freely (level I) or maintained a target tidal volume equal to (level II) or twice the control (level III) at a breathing frequency of 15/min (similar to the control frequency) with an inspiratory load, an expiratory load, and without loads under hyperoxic normocapnia. In tests at levels II and III, end-expiratory lung volume was maintained at functional residual capacity. A linear resistance of 25 cmH2O.1(-1).s was used for both inspiratory and expiratory loading; peak mouth pressure (Pm) was measured, and the intensity of dyspnea (psi) was assessed with a visual analog scale. The sensation of dyspnea increased significantly with the magnitude of expiratory Pm during expiratory loading (level II: Pm = 9.4 +/- 1.5 (SE) cmH2O, psi = 1.26 +/- 0.35; level III: Pm = 20.3 +/- 2.8 cmH2O, psi = 2.22 +/- 0.48) and with inspiratory Pm during inspiratory loading (level II: Pm = 9.7 +/- 1.2 cmH2O, psi = 1.35 +/- 0.38; level III: Pm = 23.9 +/- 3.0 cmH2O, psi = 2.69 +/- 0.60). However, at each level of breathing, neither the intensity of dyspnea nor the magnitude of peak Pm during loading was different between inspiratory and expiratory loading. The augmentation of dyspnea during expiratory loading was not explained simply by increases in inspiratory activity. The results indicate that heightened expiratory as well as inspiratory motor output causes comparable increases in the sensation of difficulty in breathing.  相似文献   

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