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Membrane diffusion in diseases of the pulmonary vasculature
Oppenheimer, Beno W; Berger, Kenneth I; Hadjiangelis, Nicos P; Norman, Robert G; Rapoport, David M; Goldring, Roberta M
INTRODUCTION: We examined pulmonary diffusing capacity (D(LCO)) and its partition in pulmonary vascular diseases without evident parenchymal disease to assess the pattern and proportionality of change in membrane diffusion (D(m)) and capillary blood volume (V(c)). Disproportionate reduction in D(m) relative to V(c) (low D(m)/V(c)) in these diseases has been attributed to associated alveolar membrane/parenchymal disease, thus providing a potentially important diagnostic tool. METHODS: Diseases included: idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (n=6), chronic thromboembolic disease (n=5), and intravenous drug use (n=14), providing a spectrum of pulmonary vascular diseases. V(c) and D(m) were determined as described by Roughton and Forster. RESULTS: All diseases showed a reduced V(c) (59+/-10, 69+/-14, 71+/-21 % predicted, respectively) and D(m) (76+/-22, 53+/-19, 63+/-16 % predicted, respectively) with no differences between groups (p>0.05). Disproportionate reduction of D(m) (D(m)/V(c) % predicted <1) was seen in all diseases (range 0.36-1.89). A mathematical analysis is presented to illustrate that changes in vascular geometry may additionally influence the proportionality of changes in D(m) and V(c). The mathematical analysis suggests that when reduction in patency of some vessels co-exits with compensatory dilatation of the remaining vasculature, a disproportionate reduction in D(m) relative to V(c) may result. CONCLUSIONS: The balance between vascular curtailment and compensatory dilatation may contribute to the variability of the D(m)/V(c) relationship seen in pulmonary vascular disease. Disproportionate reduction in D(m) relative to V(c) may result from this imbalance and need not imply subclinical alveolar membrane and/or parenchymal disease.
PMID: 16376536
ISSN: 0954-6111
CID: 156665
Transition from acute to chronic hypercapnia in patients with periodic breathing: predictions from a computer model
Norman, Robert G; Goldring, Roberta M; Clain, Jeremy M; Oppenheimer, Beno W; Charney, Alan N; Rapoport, David M; Berger, Kenneth I
Acute hypercapnia may develop during periodic breathing from an imbalance between abnormal ventilatory patterns during apnea and/or hypopnea and compensatory ventilatory response in the interevent periods. However, transition of this acute hypercapnia into chronic sustained hypercapnia during wakefulness remains unexplained. We hypothesized that respiratory-renal interactions would play a critical role in this transition. Because this transition cannot be readily addressed clinically, we modified a previously published model of whole-body CO2 kinetics by adding respiratory control and renal bicarbonate kinetics. We enforced a pattern of 8 h of periodic breathing (sleep) and 16 h of regular ventilation (wakefulness) repeated for 20 days. Interventions included varying the initial awake respiratory CO2 response and varying the rate of renal bicarbonate excretion within the physiological range. The results showed that acute hypercapnia during periodic breathing could transition into chronic sustained hypercapnia during wakefulness. Although acute hypercapnia could be attributed to periodic breathing alone, transition from acute to chronic hypercapnia required either slowing of renal bicarbonate kinetics, reduction of ventilatory CO2 responsiveness, or both. Thus the model showed that the interaction between the time constant for bicarbonate excretion and respiratory control results in both failure of bicarbonate concentration to fully normalize before the next period of sleep and persistence of hypercapnia through blunting of ventilatory drive. These respiratory-renal interactions create a cumulative effect over subsequent periods of sleep that eventually results in a self-perpetuating state of chronic hypercapnia.
PMID: 16384839
ISSN: 8750-7587
CID: 156579
Hypercapnia and ventilatory periodicity in obstructive sleep apnea syndrome
Ayappa, Indu; Berger, Kenneth I; Norman, Robert G; Oppenheimer, Beno W; Rapoport, David M; Goldring, Roberta M
Prevention of acute hypercapnia during obstructive events in obstructive sleep apnea requires a balance between carbon dioxide (CO(2)) loading during the event and CO(2) unloading in the interevent period. Earlier studies have demonstrated that acute CO(2) retention may occur despite high interevent ventilation when the interevent duration is short relative to the duration of the preceding event. The present study examines the relationship between apnea and interapnea durations and relates this assessment of ventilatory periodicity to the degree of chronic hypercapnia in subjects with severe sleep apnea. A total of 18 subjects with sleep apnea (> 40 apnea/hour; chronic awake Pa(CO2) 36-62 mm Hg) and without underlying lung disease underwent polysomnography. For each event, apnea duration, interapnea duration, and apnea/interapnea duration ratio were determined. No relationship was observed between chronic Pa(CO2) and mean apnea or interapnea duration (p > 0.1). However, Pa(CO2) was directly related to apnea/interapnea duration ratio (r = 0.48; p < 0.05) such that with increasing chronic hypercapnia the interapnea duration shortens relative to the apnea duration. The present study suggests that control of the interapnea ventilatory duration relative to the duration of the preceding apnea, is an important component of the integrated ventilatory response to CO(2) loading during apnea and may contribute toward the development and/or maintenance of chronic hypercapnia in obstructive sleep apnea/hypopnea syndrome.
PMID: 12379556
ISSN: 1073-449x
CID: 156529