Circulation, Vol 77, 407-414, Copyright © 1988 by American Heart Association
H Kato, AS Menon and AS Slutsky
We studied the effect of phasic pulmonary afferent information on heart
rate (HR) during a progressive reduction in oxygen saturation (SaO2). The
Hering-Breuer reflex was evaluated with the use of the ratio of apnea
duration after lung inflation to the preceding expiratory time (dT). Phasic
afferent activity was stopped in anesthetized, paralyzed dogs by
constant-flow ventilation (CFV), a technique that removes cyclic changes in
lung volume. During normocapnic (PaCO2 = 36.4 +/- 1.1 mm Hg) spontaneous
breathing, there was a wide variability in HR response, with a mean delta
HR/delta SaO2 (+/- SE) of 0.62 +/- 0.27 beats/min/% (values greater than 0
indicate a tachycardiac response). There was a good correlation between
delta HR/delta SaO2 and dT (r = .79). Mean delta HR/delta SaO2 for the
combined normocapnic and hypercapnic studies during CFV was lower (-1.32
+/- 0.19 bpm/%) than that during spontaneous breathing (0.23 +/- 0.19, p
less than .0001). We suggest that the HR response to hypoxemia is strongly
related to the strength of the Hering-Breuer reflex, which may explain the
large interdog variability in HR responses.
ARTICLES
Mechanisms mediating the heart rate response to hypoxemia
Department of Medicine, Mount Sinai Hospital Research Institute, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
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