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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Alprazolam, an anxiolytic benzodiazepine, has a pharmacologic profile similar to that of diazepam. An intermediate half-life of 10-12 hours and a comparatively brief duration of activity relative to other anxiolytic benzodiazepines justified evaluation of a 0.5-mg test dose in an anxious patient with chronic obstructive lung disease. Subjective indexes, breath-by-breath respiratory drive response to
hypercapnia
, and blood alprazolam concentrations were determined before and after dosing. Subjective testing included a visual analog
dyspnea
scale, the state anxiety inventory, and subjective feelings visual analog scales (represented by alertness, calmness, and level of contentment). After dosing, the patient was better able to tolerate the rebreathing study technique. Statistically significant improvements in
dyspnea
(t - 10.20; p 0.0005), anxiety (t - 45.85; p less than 0.0001), alertness (t - 13.04; p less than 0.0001), cententedness (t - 12.27; p less than 0.0001), and calmness (t - 8.05; p less than 0.0001) occurred after alprazolam administration. Drive to breathe, as determined by mouth occlusion pressure and minute ventilation, was not statistically different before and after dosing. No adverse effects were reported or observed. Further study is warranted.
...
PMID:Effects of alprazolam on respiratory drive, anxiety, and dyspnea in chronic airflow obstruction: a case study. 292 58
The study evaluated the interrelationships between the extent of thoracic movements and respiratory chemical drive in shaping the intensity of the sensation of
dyspnea
. Normal subjects rated their sensations of
dyspnea
as PCO2 increased during free rebreathing and during rebreathing while ventilation was voluntarily maintained at a constant base-line level. Another trial evaluated the effects on the intensity of
dyspnea
, of voluntary reduction in the level of ventilation while PCO2 was held constant. During rebreathing, there was a power function relationship between changes in PCO2 and the intensity of
dyspnea
. At a given PCO2, constraining tidal volume and breathing frequency to the prerebreathing base-line level resulted in an increase in
dyspnea
. The fractional differences in the intensity of
dyspnea
between free and constrained rebreathing were independent of PCO2. However, the absolute difference in the intensity of
dyspnea
between free and constrained rebreathing enlarged with increasing
hypercapnia
. At PCO2 of 50 Torr, this difference correlated significantly with the increase in both minute ventilation (r = 0.675) and tidal volume (r = 0.757) above the base line during free rebreathing. Similarly, during steady-state
hypercapnia
at 50 Torr PCO2, the intensity of
dyspnea
increased progressively as ventilation was voluntarily reduced from the spontaneously adopted free-breathing level. These results indicate that
dyspnea
increases with the level of respiratory chemical drive but that the intensity of the sensation is further accentuated when ventilation is constrained below that demanded by the level of chemical drive. This may be explained by a loss of inhibitory feedback from lung or chest wall mechanoreceptors acting on brain stem and/or cortical centers.
...
PMID:Effects of voluntary constraining of thoracic displacement during hypercapnia. 312 74
We examined the role of CO2 responsiveness and breathing efficiency in limiting exercise capacity in 15 patients with chronic airway obstruction (FEV1 = 0.88 +/- 0.25 L, mean +/- SD). Responses of minute ventilation and P0.1 (mouth pressure 0.1 s after the onset of occluded inspiration) to
hypercapnia
(delta VE/delta PCO2, delta P0.1/delta PCO2) were measured by rebreathing, and the ratio of the two (delta VE/delta P0.1) was defined as an index of breathing efficiency during hyperventilation. Exercise capacity was measured as symptom-limited, maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max/BW) in an incremental treadmill test and also as the 12-min walking distance (TMD). All patients discontinued the treadmill test because of
dyspnea
, and the exercise capacity correlated with the degree of airway obstruction, although there was a wide variability among patients with comparable FEV1. There were no significant correlations between the responses to CO2 and exercise capacity. However, there was a significant correlation between delta VE/delta P0.1 and VO2max/BW (r = 0.87, p less than 0.001) or TMD (r = 0.78, p less than 0.001), and these correlations remained significant even when the relational effects of FEV1 were taken out. These results support the hypothesis that airway obstruction and breathing efficiency are important, but that CO2 responsiveness is not a major factor in determining the exercise capacity of patients with chronic airway obstruction.
...
PMID:Role of CO2 responsiveness and breathing efficiency in determining exercise capacity of patients with chronic airway obstruction. 314 17
Studies are reported of four patients (all lifetime non-smokers) who presented with right heart failure as a consequence of unrelieved asthmatic airways obstruction. These patients demonstrated severe airways obstruction with crackles on auscultation and
hypercapnia
. As shown here, such a presentation, without the usual pattern of
dyspnoea
and wheeze, tends to obscure the diagnosis and delays effective treatment. In three of the patients, treatment to relieve airways obstruction improved gas exchange, and the heart failure resolved. In the remaining patient, improvement was limited, and death ensued from respiratory failure. In patients who present with right heart failure, a relationship with airways obstruction and respiratory failure should be considered and assessed by objective tests. Delays in the effective treatment of these patients may result in the progression of their disease to a stage at which airways obstruction no longer responds to medical therapy.
...
PMID:Malignant asthma presenting as right heart failure. 360 Apr 57
Patients with
breathlessness
commonly describe subjective relief when seated near an open window or in front of a fan. Previous studies suggest that a flow of air or application of cold solutions to the face, nasal mucosa, or pharynx may alter ventilation. We hypothesized that a flow of cold air directed against the cheek would reduce the sensation of
breathlessness
associated with loaded breathing. Sixteen subjects breathed on a device with an inspiratory resistive load (63 cm H2O/L/s) while PCO2 was maintained at 55 torr for 5 min. All studies were performed 4 times with each subject, twice with cold air directed against the cheek (4 degrees to 10 degrees C, 4 km/h) and twice with no flow on the subject. Subjects were asked to rate their
breathlessness
using a modified Borg scale. Cold air directed on the face reduced
breathlessness
induced by an inspiratory resistive load and
hypercapnia
(6.2 +/- 1.7 Borg scale units with no flow, 5.1 +/- 1.7 with cold air; p less than 0.002) without causing a significant reduction in ventilation. This effect was not observed when cold air was directed to the leg and does not appear to be associated with a reduction in the ventilatory response to
hypercapnia
or with initiation of the diving reflex. We conclude that cold air directed against the cheek significantly reduces
dyspnea
associated with the combination of
hypercapnia
and an inspiratory resistive load.
...
PMID:Cold facial stimulation reduces breathlessness induced in normal subjects. 360 41
Thirty six patients previously treated for pulmonary tuberculosis by thoracoplasty were studied to determine the prevalence and effect of airflow obstruction. The mean (SD) FEV1 was 1.3 (0.65) 1 and the mean forced expiratory ratio (FER) 64% (12%). FEV1 was less than predicted in every patient whereas FER was less than predicted in 30, being below the lower 98th percentile in 15 (42%). In the 18 patients who complained of
breathlessness
the means of the standardised residuals (SR) for FEV1, peak expiratory flow (PEF), and FER were significantly lower and that for residual volume/total lung capacity (RV/TLC) significantly higher than those for the 18 patients who were not breathless (all p less than 0.0001). There was no difference in the smoking history of the two groups. Only three of the 23 patients in whom reversibility of airflow obstruction was assessed showed a greater than 25% increase in PEF. None showed an increase in FEV1 of greater than 15%. The 18 who were breathless had significantly lower values of arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) and higher values of arterial carbon dioxide tension (PaCO2) (p less than 0.0001). Thirteen of these patients were in chronic respiratory failure (PaO2 less than 8.0 kPa or PaCO2 greater than 5.9 kPa, or both) compared with only one of the 18 who were not breathless. The indices correlating best with PaO2 and PaCO2 were SR FEV1 and SR PEF respectively. SR FEV1 accounted for 34% of the variance in PaO2 and SR PEF for 29% of the variance in PaCO2. Airflow obstruction has been found to be common in patients with a thoracoplasty and to be associated with hypoxia and
hypercapnia
.
...
PMID:Importance of airflow obstruction after thoracoplasty. 366 Feb 88
Adolescents with mild, asymptomatic scoliosis (thoracic curvature less than 35 degrees) may have little or no impairment of resting lung volumes. Progression to more severe disease may, however, be accompanied by lung restriction, impaired exercise tolerance, and respiratory failure with CO2 retention. We wished to see whether adolescents with mild scoliosis and minimally abnormal resting pulmonary mechanics had impairment of their responses to
hypercapnia
, hypoxia, and progressive cycle exercise. Forty-four adolescents with idiopathic scoliosis were studied. The mean forced vital capacity (FVC), expressed as a percentage of the predicted value, was 94.3 +/- 2.2 (SE). The mean ventilatory response to
hypercapnia
(2.57 +/- 0.24 L/min/mm Hg) was within the normal range but was achieved with a tidal volume response (1.87 +/- .17% vital capacity [VC]/mm Hg) that was significantly lower than that previously reported in healthy young adults. Ventilatory responses to exercise were also within the normal range, the mean
dyspnea
index (VE-max/maximal voluntary ventilation) = 0.92 +/- 0.04. However, at a ventilation of 30 L/min, the tidal volume was 0.38 +/- 0.01% FVC, which was considerably lower than predicted. The tidal volume response to hypoxia was also abnormally low, the mean response being 0.52 +/- 0.059% VC/% decrease in arterial O2 saturation. These findings indicated that, even when scoliosis is asymptomatic and associated with minimal impairment of resting pulmonary function, abnormal patterns of ventilation occur during exercise or in response to chemical stimuli.
...
PMID:Ventilatory patterns during hypoxia, hypercapnia, and exercise in adolescents with mild scoliosis. 370 36
This study investigates the mechanisms underlying the perception of
breathlessness
induced by hypoxia and
hypercapnia
in both naive normal subjects and patients with respiratory mechanical problems. In normal subjects separately receiving both oscillating hypercapnic and hypoxic ventilatory stimulation, equivalent peak stimulus intensities in end-tidal gas were associated with a 'damped' ventilatory response when the frequency of stimulation was increased. A concomitant fall in peak
breathlessness
levels on a visual analogue scale was recorded in each case. In normal subjects and patients, the voluntary copying of a ventilatory pattern recorded during oscillating hypercapnic stimulation was associated with a marked diminution or complete absence of
breathlessness
despite equivalent levels of peak ventilations achieved. Voluntary copying of hypercapnic stimulated ventilation was not associated with any demonstrable change in the distribution of muscle movements between the chest wall and abdomen. These results suggest that the intensity of
breathlessness
depends on the level of effective reflex stimulation of the respiratory-related neurones in the medulla. They cannot be explained solely in terms of perception of afferent neural information arising from either chemoreceptors or respiratory mechanoreceptors.
...
PMID:Breathlessness during different forms of ventilatory stimulation: a study of mechanisms in normal subjects and respiratory patients. 393 95
The intensity of
breathlessness
induced by ventilatory stimulation resulting from
hypercapnia
, hypoxia or exercise has been quantified in normals by using the two different sensory scaling techniques of linear visual analogue scaling and ratio magnitude estimation. In naive individuals both techniques show good face validity. When related to ventilation, quantification of
breathlessness
is moderately reproducible with both methods, even when subjects are kept in ignorance of the pattern of ventilatory stimulation. There is a small within- and large between-subject variability with both scaling techniques; possible factors responsible are discussed. The reproducibility of visual analogue scaling when related to ventilation is independent of the nature of the ventilatory stimulus and is maintained over intervals as long as 1 week when memory for the score given is unlikely to be an important factor. The difficulties of interpreting subjective estimates of perceived
breathlessness
are discussed, together with the relative merits of the two scaling techniques.
...
PMID:The measurement of breathlessness induced in normal subjects: validity of two scaling techniques. 406 56
Intrapulmonary occult bleeding is a serious complication of anticoagulants. Diagnostic difficulties are such that this complication is rarely described: 8 cases in the literature. The authors report two new cases. In both of these patients oral anticoagulant therapy resulted in a severe haemorrhagic syndrome on a clinical (melaena and/or epistaxis) and laboratory (haemoglobin less than 9 g/100 ml and prothrombin time less than 10 p. 100) basis. After a period of 24 to 48 hours, an acute respiratory distress syndrome developed. There was
dyspnoea
without major haemoptysis, a hypoxia/
hypercapnia
syndrome and, by X-ray, the rapid development of a diffuse micronodular miliary picture. The diagnosis of intrapulmonary occult bleeding was based upon fibroscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) showing the pathological presence of large numbers of alveolar siderophages. However, the worsening of hypoxia brought about by bronchoalveolar lavage is such that careful consideration must be taken before the technique is used. Intrapulmonary occult bleeding must therefore be borne in mind in the presence of an imbalance in anticoagulant treatment complicated by respiratory distress and a reticulonodular radiological appearance.
...
PMID:[Occult intrapulmonary hemorrhage caused by anticoagulants]. 611 3
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