| Literature DB >> 27117877 |
Setsuro Tsukada1,2, Yuri Masaoka1, Akira Yoshikawa1, Keiji Okamoto1, Ikuo Homma1, Masahiko Izumizaki3.
Abstract
During exercise, tidal volume initially contributes to ventilatory responses more than respiratory frequency, and respiratory frequency then increases rapidly while tidal volume stabilizes. Dyspnea intensity is also known to increase in a threshold-like manner. We tested the possibility that the threshold of tachypneic breathing is equal to that of dyspnea perception during cycle ergometer exercise (n = 27). Dyspnea intensity was scored by a visual analog scale. Thresholds were expressed as values of pulmonary O2 uptake at each breakpoint. Dyspnea intensity and respiratory frequency started increasing rapidly once the intensity of stimuli exceeded a threshold level. The thresholds for dyspnea intensity and for occurrence of tachypnea were significantly correlated. An intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.71 and narrow limits of agreement on the Bland-Altman plot indicated a good agreement between these thresholds. These results suggest that the start of tachypneic breathing coincides with the threshold for dyspnea intensity during cycle ergometer exercise.Entities:
Keywords: Dyspnea; Exercise hyperpnea; Pulmonary O2 uptake; Respiratory frequency; Tachypnea
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27117877 DOI: 10.1007/s12576-016-0452-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Physiol Sci ISSN: 1880-6546 Impact factor: 2.781