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1 Institute of Health and Sports Science, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba City, Japan 2 Faculty of Human Development, Kobe University, Kobe 657-8501, Japan 3 Applied Physiology Laboratory, Kobe Design University, Kobe 651-2196, Japan
We tested the hypothesis that hyperthermic hyperventilation in part reflects enhanced chemoreceptor ventilatory O2 drive, and that the resultant hypocapnia attenuates ventilatory responses and/or middle cerebral artery mean blood velocity (MCAVmean) in resting humans. Eleven healthy subjects were passively heated for 50–80 min, causing oesophageal temperature (Toes) to increase by 1.6°C. During heating, minute ventilation
increased (P < 0.05), while end-tidal CO2 pressure (PET,CO2) and MCAVmean declined. A hyperoxia test in which three breaths of hyperoxic air were inspired was performed once before heating and three times during the heating. When we observed hypocapnia (PET,CO2 below 40 mmHg), PET,CO2 was restored to the eucapnic level by adding 100% CO2 to the inspired air immediately before the last two tests. Minute ventilation was significantly reduced by hyperoxia, and that reduction gradually increased with increasing Toes. However, the percentage decrease in
from the normoxic level was small (20–29%) and unchanged during heating. When PET,CO2 was restored to eucapnic levels,
was unchanged, but MCAVmean was partly restored to the level seen prior to heating (28.1% restoration at Toes 37.6°C and 38.1% restoration at Toes 38.0°C). These findings suggest that although hyperthermia increases chemoreceptor ventilatory O2 drive in resting humans, the relative contribution of the chemoreceptor ventilatory O2 drive to hyperthermic hyperventilation is small (
20%) and unaffected by increasing core temperature. Moreover, hypocapnia induced by hyperthermic hyperventilation reduces cerebral blood flow but not ventilatory responses.
(Received 24 January 2008;
accepted after revision 2 April 2008; first published online 10 April 2008)
Corresponding author T. Nishiyasu: Institute of Health and Sports Science, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba City, Ibaraki 305-8574, Japan. Email: nisiyasu{at}taiiku.tsukuba.ac.jp
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