Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 152, No. 3, 09 1995, 1010-1015.
Regulation of breathholding time and sensation after heart-lung transplantation
V Ninane and M Estenne
Chest Service, Saint-Pierre University Hospital, Brussels, Belgium.
To assess whether pulmonary vagal afferents affect the duration of
breathholding, the associated respiratory distress and their dependence on
lung volume, we studied seven heart-lung transplant (HLT) patients with
chronic pulmonary denervation and seven matched control subjects. Voluntary
breathholds were performed at 20% and 80% vital capacity (VC) after
rebreathing a 7% CO2-93% O2 gas mixture. Time to breakpoint, oxygen
saturation, and end-tidal PCO2 were measured. All subjects were questioned
on their sensations during breathholding; in addition, quantitative
assessment of the sensations was obtained using a visual analog scale (VAS)
in the seven control subjects and four HLT subjects. Breathholding time was
comparable in both groups at each lung volume but was invariably shorter (p
< 0.0005) at 20% VC (mean +/- SD; HLT versus control subjects: 68 +/- 29
versus 79 +/- 29 s) than at 80% VC (corresponding values: 92 +/- 35 versus
103 +/- 30 s). Similar results were obtained after anesthesia of intact
tracheal and upper airway receptors in five HLT subjects. Six subjects from
each group spontaneously reported air hunger and found it easier to perform
breathholding at 80% than at 20% VC. The VAS ratings generally showed a
maximum score at breakpoint, which implies that the distress increased more
rapidly at low than at high lung volume. We conclude that in the absence of
vagal afferent innervation from the lungs: (1) the air hunger form of
dyspnea is maintained; (2) the duration of breathholding is not
substantially modified; and (3) breathholding time and sensations still
vary as a function of lung volume.