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Query: UMLS:C0085383 (
hypocapnia
)
1,697
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Seventeen (39%) of 44 patients with chest pain but without significant ST depression on treadmill exercise had their usual chest pain reproduced during or after 3 min of voluntary hyperventilation (VHV) at rest. These patients with hyperventilation positive tests had not only significantly more hyperventilation-related symptoms and respiratory complaints but also shorter breath-holding times, lower mean resting end-tidal pCO2 and higher mean respiratory rates than those with negative tests and normal controls. Of the psychological variables, only phobic avoidance scores for
agoraphobia
were higher in patients with positive tests. These findings suggest that in two fifths of patients with exercise tests negative for ischaemia, chest pain is associated with HV, but abnormalities of breath control and relative
hypocapnia
are present even in the absence of chest pain. It is possible that a chronic abnormality of respiratory control may interact with attitudinal factors in the experience of non-cardiac chest pain.
...
PMID:Hyperventilation provocation in patients with chest pain and a negative treadmill exercise test. 202 44
Alkalosis is prominent among the many physiologic and biochemical effects of sodium lactate infusion. Though this is partially due to the conversion of lactate to bicarbonate, the metabolic component, it may also be secondary to hyperventilation before and during the infusion, the respiratory component. We analyzed pH, carbon dioxide pressure, bicarbonate, and inorganic phosphate from patients with panic disorder and
agoraphobia
with panic attacks and from normal controls both before and during lactate infusion. Our findings extend earlier work demonstrating that many such patients are chronic hyperventilators. Both metabolic and respiratory alkalosis develop in all subjects during lactate infusion, but only hyperventilation-induced
hypocapnia
differentiates patients at the point of lactate-induced panic from nonpanicking patients and normal controls. Finally, low inorganic phosphate levels at baseline appear associated with patients who will panic during the subsequent lactate infusion. This last unexpected finding may reflect hyperventilation or an abnormality in intracellular glycolysis.
...
PMID:Blood gas changes and hypophosphatemia in lactate-induced panic. 309 75