Influence of hypercapnia and hypercapnic hypoxia on the heart rate response to apnea.

Physiol Rep

Neurovascular Health Lab, Faculty of Kinesiology, Sport, and Recreation, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how increased carbon dioxide (hypercapnia) and low oxygen levels (hypoxia) during apneas affect heart rate, specifically focusing on bradycardia (slowed heart rate).
  • Researchers hypothesized that apneas with both hypercapnia and hypoxia would lead to more significant bradycardia compared to either condition alone.
  • Results showed that hypoxia was the main factor causing bradycardia, with combined hypercapnia and hypoxia leading to similar heart rate responses as hypoxia alone.

Article Abstract

We aimed to determine the relative contribution of hypercapnia and hypoxia to the bradycardic response to apneas. We hypothesized that apneas with hypercapnia would cause greater bradycardia than normoxia, similar to the response seen with hypoxia, and that apneas with hypercapnic hypoxia would induce greater bradycardia than hypoxia or hypercapnia alone. Twenty-six healthy participants (12 females; 23 ± 2 years; BMI 24 ± 3 kg/m) underwent three gas challenges: hypercapnia (+5 torr end tidal partial pressure of CO [PCO]), hypoxia (50 torr end tidal partial pressure of O [PO]), and hypercapnic hypoxia (combined hypercapnia and hypoxia), with each condition interspersed with normocapnic normoxia. Heart rate and rhythm, blood pressure, PCO, PO, and oxygen saturation were measured continuously. Hypercapnic hypoxic apneas induced larger bradycardia (-19 ± 16 bpm) than normocapnic normoxic apneas (-11 ± 15 bpm; p = 0.002), but had a comparable response to hypoxic (-19 ± 15 bpm; p = 0.999) and hypercapnic apneas (-14 ± 14 bpm; p = 0.059). Hypercapnic apneas were not different from normocapnic normoxic apneas (p = 0.134). After removal of the normocapnic normoxic heart rate response, the change in heart rate during hypercapnic hypoxia (-11 ± 16 bpm) was similar to the summed change during hypercapnia+hypoxia (-9 ± 10 bpm; p = 0.485). Only hypoxia contributed to this bradycardic response. Under apneic conditions, the cardiac response is driven by hypoxia.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11176737PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.16054DOI Listing

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