Abstract: | The effect of stimulus frequency on thein vivo pressure generating capacity of the human diaphragm is unknownat lung volumes other than functional residual capacity. Thetransdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) produced by a pair of phrenic nervestimuli may be viewed as the sum of the Pdi elicited by the first (T1Pdi) and second (T2 Pdi) stimuli. We used bilateral anteriorsupramaximal magnetic phrenic nerve stimulation and a digitalsubtraction technique to obtain the T2 Pdi at interstimulus intervalsof 999, 100, 50, 33, and 10 ms in eight normal subjects at lung volumesbetween residual volume and total lung capacity. The reduction in T2Pdi that we observed as lung volume increased was greatest at long interstimulus intervals, whereas the T2 Pdi obtained with short interstimulus intervals remained relatively stable over the 50% ofvital capacity around functional residual capacity. For all interstimulus intervals, the total pressure produced by the pair decreased as a function of increasing lung volume. These data demonstrate that, in the human diaphragm, hyperinflation has a disproportionately severe effect on the summation of pressure responseselicited by low-frequency stimulations; this effect isdistinct from and additional to the known length-tension relationship. |