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Sevoflurane and Hypercapnia Blunt the Physiological Variability of Spontaneous Breathing: A Comparative Interventional Study

Background: Although spontaneous breathing is known to exhibit substantial physiological fluctuation that contributes to alveolar recruitment, changes in the variability of the respiratory pattern following inhalation of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) and volatile anesthetics have not been characterized. Th...

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Autores principales: Balogh, Adam L., Sudy, Roberta, Petak, Ferenc, Habre, Walid, Dos Santos Rocha, Andre
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9035625/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35480042
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.871070
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author Balogh, Adam L.
Sudy, Roberta
Petak, Ferenc
Habre, Walid
Dos Santos Rocha, Andre
author_facet Balogh, Adam L.
Sudy, Roberta
Petak, Ferenc
Habre, Walid
Dos Santos Rocha, Andre
author_sort Balogh, Adam L.
collection PubMed
description Background: Although spontaneous breathing is known to exhibit substantial physiological fluctuation that contributes to alveolar recruitment, changes in the variability of the respiratory pattern following inhalation of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) and volatile anesthetics have not been characterized. Therefore, we aimed at comparing the indices of breathing variability under wakefulness, sleep, hypercapnia and sedative and anesthetic concentrations of sevoflurane. Methods: Spontaneous breathing pattern was recorded on two consecutive days in six rabbits using open whole-body plethysmography under wakefulness and spontaneous sleep and following inhalation of 5% CO(2), 2% sevoflurane (0.5 MAC) and 4% (1 MAC) sevoflurane. Tidal volume (V(T)), respiratory rate (RR), minute ventilation (MV), inspiratory time (T(I)) and mean inspiratory flow (V(T)/T(I)) were calculated from the pressure fluctuations in the plethysmograph. Means and coefficients of variation were calculated for each measured variable. Autoregressive model fitting was applied to estimate the relative contributions of random, correlated, and oscillatory behavior to the total variance. Results: Physiological sleep decreased MV by lowering RR without affecting V(T). Hypercapnia increased MV by elevating V(T). Sedative and anesthetic concentrations of sevoflurane increased V(T) but decreased MV due to a decrease in RR. Compared to the awake stage, CO(2) had no effect on V(T)/T(I) while sevoflurane depressed significantly the mean inspiratory flow. Compared to wakefulness, the variability in V(T), RR, MV, T(I) and V(T)/T(I) were not affected by sleep but were all significantly decreased by CO(2) and sevoflurane. The variance of T(I) originating from correlated behavior was significantly decreased by both concentrations of sevoflurane compared to the awake and asleep conditions. Conclusions: The variability of spontaneous breathing during physiological sleep and sevoflurane-induced anesthesia differed fundamentally, with the volatile agent diminishing markedly the fluctuations in respiratory volume, inspiratory airflow and breathing frequency. These findings may suggest the increased risk of lung derecruitment during procedures under sevoflurane in which spontaneous breathing is maintained.
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spelling pubmed-90356252022-04-26 Sevoflurane and Hypercapnia Blunt the Physiological Variability of Spontaneous Breathing: A Comparative Interventional Study Balogh, Adam L. Sudy, Roberta Petak, Ferenc Habre, Walid Dos Santos Rocha, Andre Front Physiol Physiology Background: Although spontaneous breathing is known to exhibit substantial physiological fluctuation that contributes to alveolar recruitment, changes in the variability of the respiratory pattern following inhalation of carbon dioxide (CO(2)) and volatile anesthetics have not been characterized. Therefore, we aimed at comparing the indices of breathing variability under wakefulness, sleep, hypercapnia and sedative and anesthetic concentrations of sevoflurane. Methods: Spontaneous breathing pattern was recorded on two consecutive days in six rabbits using open whole-body plethysmography under wakefulness and spontaneous sleep and following inhalation of 5% CO(2), 2% sevoflurane (0.5 MAC) and 4% (1 MAC) sevoflurane. Tidal volume (V(T)), respiratory rate (RR), minute ventilation (MV), inspiratory time (T(I)) and mean inspiratory flow (V(T)/T(I)) were calculated from the pressure fluctuations in the plethysmograph. Means and coefficients of variation were calculated for each measured variable. Autoregressive model fitting was applied to estimate the relative contributions of random, correlated, and oscillatory behavior to the total variance. Results: Physiological sleep decreased MV by lowering RR without affecting V(T). Hypercapnia increased MV by elevating V(T). Sedative and anesthetic concentrations of sevoflurane increased V(T) but decreased MV due to a decrease in RR. Compared to the awake stage, CO(2) had no effect on V(T)/T(I) while sevoflurane depressed significantly the mean inspiratory flow. Compared to wakefulness, the variability in V(T), RR, MV, T(I) and V(T)/T(I) were not affected by sleep but were all significantly decreased by CO(2) and sevoflurane. The variance of T(I) originating from correlated behavior was significantly decreased by both concentrations of sevoflurane compared to the awake and asleep conditions. Conclusions: The variability of spontaneous breathing during physiological sleep and sevoflurane-induced anesthesia differed fundamentally, with the volatile agent diminishing markedly the fluctuations in respiratory volume, inspiratory airflow and breathing frequency. These findings may suggest the increased risk of lung derecruitment during procedures under sevoflurane in which spontaneous breathing is maintained. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-04-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9035625/ /pubmed/35480042 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.871070 Text en Copyright © 2022 Balogh, Sudy, Petak, Habre and Dos Santos Rocha. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Balogh, Adam L.
Sudy, Roberta
Petak, Ferenc
Habre, Walid
Dos Santos Rocha, Andre
Sevoflurane and Hypercapnia Blunt the Physiological Variability of Spontaneous Breathing: A Comparative Interventional Study
title Sevoflurane and Hypercapnia Blunt the Physiological Variability of Spontaneous Breathing: A Comparative Interventional Study
title_full Sevoflurane and Hypercapnia Blunt the Physiological Variability of Spontaneous Breathing: A Comparative Interventional Study
title_fullStr Sevoflurane and Hypercapnia Blunt the Physiological Variability of Spontaneous Breathing: A Comparative Interventional Study
title_full_unstemmed Sevoflurane and Hypercapnia Blunt the Physiological Variability of Spontaneous Breathing: A Comparative Interventional Study
title_short Sevoflurane and Hypercapnia Blunt the Physiological Variability of Spontaneous Breathing: A Comparative Interventional Study
title_sort sevoflurane and hypercapnia blunt the physiological variability of spontaneous breathing: a comparative interventional study
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9035625/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35480042
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.871070
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