نتایج جستجو برای: tidal co2

تعداد نتایج: 93299  

Journal: :American journal of physiology. Regulatory, integrative and comparative physiology 2005
Stephen M Johnson Robert J Creighton

After occurrence of spinal cord injury, it is not known whether the respiratory rhythm generator undergoes plasticity to compensate for respiratory insufficiency. To test this hypothesis, respiratory variables were measured in adult semiaquatic turtles using a pneumotachograph attached to a breathing chamber on a water-filled tank. Turtles breathed room air (2 h) before being challenged with tw...

Journal: :Neuropeptides 1991
S Vonhof A L Sirén G Z Feuerstein

Thyrotropin-releasing hormone was shown to exert potent ventilatory effects after central administration. These data, however, were derived from studies using anesthetized animal preparations. Since TRH elicits strong arousal reactions, the observed ventilatory effects of TRH under anesthesia may have been due to nonspecific reduction in the anesthetic state of the animals. In order to clarify ...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 2004
Jon C Kolb Philip N Ainslie Kojiro Ide Marc J Poulin

The effects of discontinuous hypoxia on cerebrovascular regulation in humans are unknown. We hypothesized that five nocturnal hypoxic exposures (8 h/day) at a simulated altitude of 4,300 m (inspired O2 fraction = approximately 13.8%) would elicit cerebrovascular responses that are similar to those that have been reported during chronic altitude exposures. Twelve male subjects (26.6 +/- 4.1 yr, ...

2013
R. Afroundeh T. Arimitsu C. S. Lian T. Yunoki T. Yano K. Shirakawa

We investigated this hypothesis that arterial CO2 pressure (PaCO2) drives ventilation (V . E) with a time delay during recovery from short impulse-like exercise (10 s) with work load of 200 watts. V . E and end tidal CO2 pressure (PETCO2) were measured continuously during rest, warming up, exercise and recovery periods. PaCO2 was predicted (PaCO2 pre) from PETCO2 and tidal volume (VT). PETCO2 a...

2008
Mari Herigstad Marzieh Fatemian Peter A. Robbins

Hypoxic exposure lasting a few hours results in an elevation of ventilation and a lowering of end-tidal P(CO2) (P(ET(CO2))) that persists on return to breathing air. We sought to determine whether this increment in ventilation is fixed (hypothesis 1), or whether it increases in proportion to the rise in metabolic rate associated with exercise (hypothesis 2). Ten subjects were studied on two sep...

2004
Natalie C. Taylor Aihua Li Adam Green Hannah C. Kinney Eugene E. Nattie

In conscious rats, focal CO2 stimulation of the medullary raphe increases ventilation, while interference with serotonergic function here decreases the ventilatory response to systemic hypercapnia. We sought to determine whether repeated administration of a selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor in this region would increase the ventilatory response to hypercapnia in unanaesthetized rats. In ra...

Journal: :The European respiratory journal 1999
T Troosters A Verstraete K Ramon R Schepers R Gosselink M Decramer K P Van de Woestijne

In some patients exercise induces numerous complaints which cannot be attributed to an organic disorder, and which are suggestive of hyperventilation. The study was designed to investigate in this type of patient: 1) exercise capacity and muscle force; 2) breathing pattern and symptoms during maximal exercise and recovery; 3) relationships between symptoms and breathing pattern. Twenty-four pat...

Journal: :Chest 1986
G Wolff J X Brunner E Grädel

Pulmonary gas exchange rates in eight patients after open heart surgery were studied during weaning from the ventilator. We investigated continuous positive pressure ventilation (CPPV), intermittent mandatory ventilation (IMV) and spontaneous breathing with continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP). During each mode of ventilation we measured: CO2 production (VCO2), O2 consumption (VO2), cardi...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 2014
Jasper Verbree Anne-Sophie G T Bronzwaer Eidrees Ghariq Maarten J Versluis Mat J A P Daemen Mark A van Buchem Albert Dahan Johannes J van Lieshout Matthias J P van Osch

In the evaluation of cerebrovascular CO2 reactivity measurements, it is often assumed that the diameter of the large intracranial arteries insonated by transcranial Doppler remains unaffected by changes in arterial CO2 partial pressure. However, the strong cerebral vasodilatory capacity of CO2 challenges this assumption, suggesting that there should be some changes in diameter, even if very sma...

Journal: :Archives of Disease in Childhood 1987

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