Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 157, No. 1, Jan 1998, 106-110.
Breathing by double-lung recipients during exercise: response to expiratory threshold loading [In Process Citation]
R Pellegrino, JR Rodarte, AE Frost and MB Reid
Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine Section, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030, USA.
Ventilation during exercise is near-normal in double-lung transplant
recipients despite lung denervation. We tested the hypothesis that
denervation effects might be unmasked during exercise by exposing these
patients to an expiratory load. Eight double-lung recipients and nine
intact control subjects were exercised to exhaustion. Ergometer work
increased 20 Watt every 2 min; expiratory threshold loading (4 cm H2O) was
imposed for five to six breaths at each exercise level; ventilation and O2
consumption were measured. Transplant recipients and control subjects
increased ventilation similarly for comparable fractions of maximal work.
At maximal exercise, transplant recipients achieved lower work (62 versus
155 W; p < 0.001) and O2 consumption (0.88 versus 2.26 L/min; p <
0.001) than control subjects, with proportional reductions in tidal volume
(1.6 versus 2.6 L; p < 0.05) and ventilation (38 versus 79 L/min; p <
0.01). Threshold loading decreased expiratory flow, breathing frequency,
and minute ventilation in both groups (p < 0.05). Unlike control
subjects, transplant recipients also slowed inspiratory flow (p < 0.05)
and prolonged inspiration (p < 0.01), exaggerating the fall in breathing
frequency and ventilation (p < 0.01). We conclude that afferent
information from pulmonary receptors modulates inspiration during
expiratory loading; bilateral denervation disrupts these pathways, causing
double-lung recipients to inspire more slowly.