Intra-individual variability in cerebrovascular and respiratory chemosensitivity: Can we characterize a chemoreflex "reactivity profile"?

Respir Physiol Neurobiol

Department of Biology, Faculty of Science and Technology, Mount Royal University, 4825 Mount Royal Gate SW, Calgary, AB, Canada T3E 6K6. Electronic address:

Published: August 2017

Intra-individual variability in the magnitude of human cerebrovascular and respiratory chemoreflex responses is largely unexplored. By comparing response magnitudes of cerebrovascular CO reactivity (CVR; middle and posterior cerebral arteries; MCA, PCA), central (CCR; CO) and peripheral respiratory chemoreflexes (PCR; CO and O), we tested the hypothesis that a within-individual reactivity magnitude profile could be characterized. The magnitudes of CVR and CCR were tested with hyperoxic rebreathing and PCR magnitudes were tested through transient respiratory tests (TT-CO, hypercapnia; TT-N, hypoxia). No significant intra-individual relationships were found between CCR vs. CVR (MCA and PCA), CCR vs. PCR (TT-N or TT-CO) (r<0.2, P>0.3) response magnitudes. Statistically significant relationships were found between MCA vs. PCA reactivity (r=0.45, P<0.01) and PCR TT-N vs. PCR TT-CO (r=0.79, P<0.001) responses. Using qualitative and quantitative comparisons, we conclude that an intra-individual chemoreflex reactivity magnitude profile cannot be characterized. These data highlight the considerable between- and within-individual variability that exists in human cerebrovascular and respiratory chemoreflexes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resp.2017.02.014DOI Listing

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