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Carbon dioxide protects simulated driving performance during severe hypoxia. | LitMetric

Carbon dioxide protects simulated driving performance during severe hypoxia.

Eur J Appl Physiol

Exercise Neurometabolism Laboratory, University of Auckland, Building 907, 368 Khyber Pass Road, Newmarket, Auckland, 1023, New Zealand.

Published: July 2023

Purpose: We sought to determine the effect of acute severe hypoxia, with and without concurrent manipulation of carbon dioxide (CO), on complex real-world psychomotor task performance.

Methods: Twenty-one participants completed a 10-min simulated driving task while breathing room air (normoxia) or hypoxic air (PO = 45 mmHg) under poikilocapnic, isocapnic, and hypercapnic conditions (PCO = not manipulated, clamped at baseline, and clamped at baseline + 10 mmHg, respectively). Driving performance was assessed using a fixed-base motor vehicle simulator. Oxygenation in the frontal cortex was measured using functional near-infrared spectroscopy.

Results: Speed limit exceedances were greater during the poikilocapnic than normoxic, hypercapnic, and isocapnic conditions (mean exceedances: 8, 4, 5, and 7, respectively; all p ≤ 0.05 vs poikilocapnic hypoxia). Vehicle speed was greater in the poikilocapnic than normoxic and hypercapnic conditions (mean difference: 0.35 km h and 0.67 km h, respectively). All hypoxic conditions similarly decreased cerebral oxyhaemoglobin and increased deoxyhaemoglobin, compared to normoxic baseline, while total hemoglobin remained unchanged.

Conclusions: These findings demonstrate that supplemental CO can confer a neuroprotective effect by offsetting impairments in complex psychomotor task performance evoked by severe poikilocapnic hypoxia; however, differences in performance are unlikely to be linked to measurable differences in cerebral oxygenation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10276124PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00421-023-05151-1DOI Listing

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