Literature DB >> 27881161

Lower hypoxic ventilatory response in smokers compared to non-smokers during abstinence from cigarettes.

Wulf Hildebrandt1,2, Roland Sauer3,4, Ulrich Koehler5, Peter Bärtsch6, Ralf Kinscherf7.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Carotid body O2-chemosensitivity determines the hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR) as part of crucial regulatory reflex within oxygen homeostasis. Nicotine has been suggested to attenuate HVR in neonates of smoking mothers. However, whether smoking affects HVR in adulthood has remained unclear and probably blurred by acute ventilatory stimulation through cigarette smoke. We hypothesized that HVR is substantially reduced in smokers when studied after an overnight abstinence from cigarettes i.e. after nicotine elimination.
METHODS: We therefore determined the isocapnic HVR of 23 healthy male smokers (age 33.9 ± 2.0 years, BMI 24.2 ± 0.5 kg m-2, mean ± SEM) with a smoking history of >8 years after 12 h of abstinence and compared it to that of 23 healthy male non-smokers matched for age and BMI.
RESULTS: Smokers and non-smokers were comparable with regard to factors known to affect isocapnic HVR such as plasma levels of glucose and thiols as well as intracellular levels of glutathione in blood mononuclear cells. As a new finding, abstinent smokers had a significantly lower isocapnic HVR (0.024 ± 0.002 vs. 0.037 ± 0.003 l min-1 %-1BMI-1, P = 0.002) compared to non-smokers. However, upon re-exposure to cigarettes the smokers' HVR increased immediately to the non-smokers' level.
CONCLUSIONS: This is the first report of a substantial HVR reduction in abstinent adult smokers which appears to be masked by daily smoking routine and may therefore have been previously overlooked. A low HVR may be suggested as a novel link between smoking and aggravated hypoxemia during sleep especially in relevant clinical conditions such as COPD.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Carotid body; Chemoreceptor; Nicotine; O2-sensing; Smoking; Ventilation

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27881161      PMCID: PMC5121951          DOI: 10.1186/s12890-016-0323-0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Pulm Med        ISSN: 1471-2466            Impact factor:   3.317


Background

The peripheral arterial chemoreceptors are key O2-sensors for O2-homeostasis in normoxia and hypoxia during all phases of life [1-4]. Upon hypoxic stimulation, the chemoreceptors trigger a reflexogenic hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR) which along with neurohumoral responses contributes a great portion to resting minute ventilation limiting arterial O2-desaturation e.g. during sleep [1, 2, 5, 6]. The isocapnic HVR, as a measure of carotid O2-chemosensitivity, is considered to be a hereditary and therefore relatively stable individual feature and at the same time reveals a surprisingly large interindividual variability [7, 8], which determines and predicts intolerance of healthy subjects to severe hypoxia, e.g. at high altitude [9, 10], and fatal respiratory failure in rare cases of genetically abolished HVR [2]. A low HVR may especially become critical with severely hypoxemic clinical conditions like chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or sometimes obstructive sleep apnea [11, 12] which, however, involves a long-term potentiation of HVR with a rather complex pathophysiological role [3, 4, 13]. In healthy adults, a limited number of factors beside drugs reportedly lead to acquired modifications of HVR including acute and chronic hypoxic exposure, aging and, potentially, endurance training [3, 14–17]. A critical HVR attenuation has, however, been extensively discussed to result from long-term intrauterine and/or early postnatal nicotine exposure, thereby possibly linking the sudden infant death syndrome to maternal smoking in a dose–response-fashion [4, 18–21]. Among possible mechanisms suggested for such nicotine-induced impairment of chemoreceptor O2-sensing were alterations within the β2-subunit of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor because the nicotine effect was abrogated or mimicked in related β2-subunit mutants [22, 23]. In humans, evidence for an impaired chemoreceptor O2-sensing through nicotine exposure appears to be preliminary and restricted to studies in infants of smoking mothers in the context of sudden infant death: Healthy, ≤3 months old, term or preterm infants exposed to maternal cigarette smoking/nicotine revealed a weakened (poikilocapnic) HVR and awakening response [18, 24, 25]. However, the important question, whether in adulthood long-term smoking may affect HVR, has remained surprisingly understudied. One earlier study by Kawakami et al. [26] in smokers (SM) and their non-smoking (NSM) homozygote twins failed to demonstrate a smoking-related HVR attenuation after a 3-h-abstinence which is insufficient to eliminate nicotine with an in-vivo half-life of 2 h, as already speculated by these authors themselves. In fact, subsequent studies, including one from the same group, have shown an acute HVR-increase through smoking in both, SM and NSM probably mediated through carotid chemoreceptors [27-30] which might have masked a possible HVR attenuation in the elegant study by Kawakami et al. [26] in twins. The present study intended to clarify whether or not healthy adult SM reveal a substantial reduction of their isocapnic HVR compared to NSM, when abstaining long enough (12 h overnight) from smoking to eliminate nicotine. According to a representative diurnal profile of smokers, plasma nicotine levels accumulate (to between 10 and 30 ng/ml) in the evening and are eliminated to below 10% within 10 h in healthy adults, while cotinine as a major metabolite is eliminated by about 50% [31, 32]. Furthermore, we evaluated the possible acute masking effect of subsequent re-exposure to cigarette smoke. Because smoking may acutely and chronically induce oxidative stress [33, 34], we also assessed the thiol/disulphide redox state in the plasma and in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), which both may massively affect HVR [35, 36]. In addition, we matched SM and NSM for factors known to affect HVR, like age, sex, and BMI and excluded differences in plasma levels of glucose, HbA1c or potassium [15, 16, 37, 38]. We found a significant, large reduction of isocapnic HVR in healthy male adult SM compared to NSM, which was virtually completely masked by acute enhancement through smoking a single cigarette.

Methods

Study design and subjects

To compare HVR between smokers and non-smokers in an observational cross-sectional design, a sample size of 23 per group was calculated for detection of a 30% difference in HVR of the higher value with a power of 80% at the significance level of P < 0.05. 46 healthy male subjects were recruited consecutively by public announcements and volunteered for the study. They were assigned to the group of SM (n = 23) if they had a >8-years-history of smoking >15 non-mentholated cigarettes /day (>0.5 mg nicotine, >6 mg tar) or to the group of NSM (controls, n = 23) if they had no smoking history or regular passive exposure to cigarette smoke according to a detailed initial interview. Health assessment before inclusion into the study included medical history, a physical examination, routine venous blood parameters, pulmonary function test, bilateral brachial arterial blood pressure measurement and a 12-lead electrocardiogram at rest. Exclusion criteria were: blood donation or exposure to an altitude above 2000 m within six months prior to the study, enrollment in competitive sports programs (>6 h per week), any medication or antioxidant supplementation including N-acetylcysteine [35] within the last 3 months, abnormal pulmonary function, hyperlipidemia, hyperhomocysteinemia, arterial hypertension (RR systolic >160 mmHg, diastolic >100 mmHg) or hypotension (RR systolic <90 mmHg), any history or symptom of cardiovascular disease or events, any major intestinal, hepatic, renal, neurological or psychiatric disease, any alcohol or drug abuse, insufficient cooperation and missing oral or written consent. Informed oral and written consent was obtained from all subjects prior to inclusion into the study, which was approved by the Ethical Committee of the University of Heidelberg (L-264/2001) and performed according to the amended Declaration of Helsinki. Before measurements all SM were instructed and agreed to abstain from cigarettes for 12 h which was confirmed by a phone call at 11:00 p.m. before the test day and - after an 8-h-sleep - at 7:00 a.m. on test day, before subjects visited the laboratory for blood sampling and HVR measurements between 8:00 and 10:00 a.m. Furthermore, SM as well as NSM avoided any caffeine or drug intake as well as intense physical exercise for 12 h prior to measurements. HVR was determined in duplicate after resuming a comfortable semireclined position for 20 min in a quiet room with ambient temperature between 21 and 23 °C.

Measurements and equipment

Pulmonary function, resting ventilation and HVR

Pulmonary function was assessed by clinical routine parameter (see Table 1) by use of the ‚Flow-Screen‘device (Jaeger, Würzburg, Germany). Resting ventilation (VE), inspiratory and end-tidal partial pressure of CO2 (PetCO2) and O2 (PetO2) as well as CO2-output (VCO2) and O2-uptake (VO2) were measured breath-by-breath by the respiratory monitoring system Oxyconbeta (Mijnhardt, Bunnik, The Netherlands) using the software version 3.12 with elimination of sliding averages. Subjects wore a nose clip and breathed through mouth piece with a flowmeter (Triple V) connected to a low-resistance T-shape valve system (Haward, Edenridge, U.K.) with a dead space of 95 ml. Oxygen saturation (SaO2) was measured continuously by a pulse oximeter (3740 Biox Pulse Oximeter, Ohmeda Biox, Louisville, USA) using the finger probe. After recording stable normoxic baseline conditions over 5 min the isocapnic HVR was determined as described [35]. Briefly, HVR was calculated as the slope of the ventilatory response (∆ VE/∆ SaO2, ml/min/%) to a progressive lowering SaO2 from 100 to 80% (within 6–10 min) which was achieved by progressive admixture of N2 to an inspiratory air reservoir with an initial O2 fraction of 35%. Thereby PetCO2 was kept at individual normoxic baseline levels via CO2 admixture by an experienced experimenter.
Table 1

Anthropometric data, pulmonary function, normoxic resting ventilation and hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR) in non-smokers (NSM) and smokers (SM)

NSMSMa P
n 2323
Cigarettes per day(n d−1)-29.6 ± 1.6-
Pack yearsb (years)-16.8 ± 2.7-
Age(years)32.7 ± 1.733.9 ± 2.00.644
Body weight(kg)78.8 ± 2.580.3 ± 1.90.632
Body height(m)1.80 ± 1.71.81 ± 1.20.655
BMI(kg m−2)24.2 ± 0.624.2 ± 0.50.980
RR systolic(mmHg)124.5 ± 1.9129.6 ± 1.80.055
RR diastolic(mmHg)79.0 ± 1.983.0 ± 1.40.93
VC(l)5.2 ± 0.25.3 ± 0.20.847
VC relative (%)95.9 ± 3.995.1 ± 3.00.870
FVC relative (%)108 ± 4104 ± 40.535
FEV1%VC (%)78.9 ± 2.078.0 ± 2.90.803
FEV1 relative (%)106.8 ± 4.8101.2 ± 4.50.407
FEV1%VC relative (%)97.7 ± 2.796.3 ± 3.60.744
Ventilation(l min−1)9.2 ± 0.38.0 ± 0.30.006c
Tidal volume(ml)828 ± 56951 ± 930.264
Respirat. frequency(min−1)12.2 ± 1.09.9 ± 0.80.078
PetCO2 (mmHg)39.3 ± 0.539.2 ± 0.70.957
PetO2 (mmHg)101.4 ± 1.199.4 ± 1.10.218
VCO2 (ml min−1)253 ± 8233 ± 70.058
VO2 (ml min−1)304 ± 8291 ± 80.268
RQ(ratio)0.83 ± 0.010.79 ± 0.020.088
SaO2 (%)99.1 ± 0.299.0 ± 0.20.705
HVR(l min−1 %−1)0.89 ± 0.080.58 ± 0.050.003c
HVR a BMI−1 (l min−1 %−1kg−1 m−2)0.037 ± 0.0030.024 ± 0.0020.002c
PetCO2 HVR (mmHg)38.8 ± 0.438.8 ± 0.60.959

Mean ± S.E.M. a>15 cigarettes/day for >8 years with nicotine >0.5 mg and tar >6 mg

bcumulative years of 20 cigarettes/day. c for P < 0.01. BMI Body mass index, VC vital capacity, FVC forced vital capacity, FEV1 forced expiratory volume in 1 s, PetCO and PetCO end-tidal partial pressures of CO2 and O2, respectively (BTPS), VCO CO2 output, VO O2 uptake, RQ Respiratory quotient, i.e. VCO2 to VO2 ratio, SaO peripheral arterial O2-saturation, HVR hypoxic ventilatory response, PetCO mean PetCO2 during HVR measurement

Anthropometric data, pulmonary function, normoxic resting ventilation and hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR) in non-smokers (NSM) and smokers (SM) Mean ± S.E.M. a>15 cigarettes/day for >8 years with nicotine >0.5 mg and tar >6 mg bcumulative years of 20 cigarettes/day. c for P < 0.01. BMI Body mass index, VC vital capacity, FVC forced vital capacity, FEV1 forced expiratory volume in 1 s, PetCO and PetCO end-tidal partial pressures of CO2 and O2, respectively (BTPS), VCO CO2 output, VO O2 uptake, RQ Respiratory quotient, i.e. VCO2 to VO2 ratio, SaO peripheral arterial O2-saturation, HVR hypoxic ventilatory response, PetCO mean PetCO2 during HVR measurement

Venous blood parameters

Postabsorptive blood samples from an anticubital vein were analyzed in the central laboratory of the Medical University Clinic of Heidelberg for plasma levels of triglycerides, total cholesterol, very-low-density-lipoprotein (VLDL), low-density-lipoprotein (LDL), high-density lipoprotein (HDL), glucose (by the hexokinase method of Beckman-Coulter) and HbA1c (by high-performance-liquid-chromatography, HPLC). Commercially available ELISA kits were used to determine levels of oxidized LDL (oxLDL) (Mercodia, Uppsala, Sweden) as well as of tumor-necrosis-factor-α (TNF-α), soluble intercellular- and vascular-adhesion-molecules-1 (sICAM-1 and sVCAM-1) (all provided by IBL, Hamburg, Germany) in EDTA-plasma samples centrifuged at 2000 rpm for 10 min (4 °C) and stored at −75 °C. Total plasma homocysteine was determined immediately by fluorometric detection technique (Abbott Laboratory, Wiesbaden, Germany). The plasma acid-soluble thiol level (mainly cysteine) was measured photometrically (412 nm) as described [35]. The cystine (cysteine-disulphide) concentration was determined from the same supernatant by HPLC technique (Amino Acid Analyzer LC 3000, Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany). Reduced and total glutathione (GSH) as well as oxidized glutathione (GSSG; glutathione disulphide) were measured in PBMCs isolated by density gradient centrifugation as described [35].

Statistics

All statistical analyses were performed by SPSS (Version 22.0, IBM, Munich, Germany). The main outcome measure HVR as well as secondary variables were compared between SM and NSM by the two-tailed student’s t-test for unpaired samples after testing for normal distribution. Changes in HVR within the group of SM through acute smoking were analyzed by the Wilcoxon-test. All values are presented in figures and tables as means ± SEM, individual values are additionally given in the Figs. 1 and 2. The level of statistical significance was set at P < 0.05.
Fig. 1

Hypoxic ventilatory response in non-smokers and smokers. Individual (small symbols) and mean ± S.E.M. (big symbols) values of the isocapnic hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR) of non-smokers and 12-h-abstinent smokers. HVR values represent ventilatory increases (l min−1) per 1% decrease in O2-saturation and are individually normalized for, i.e. divided by, body mass index (BMI). The difference between smokers and non-smokers was highly significant (Student’s t-test, unpaired)

Fig. 2

Hypoxic ventilatory response before and after re-exposure to cigarette smoke. Individual (small symbols) and mean ± S.E.M. (big symbols) values of HVR before and after smoking of one cigarette in a subgroup (n = 14) of 12-h-abstinent smokers. The increase in HVR through smoking was highly significant (Wilcoxon-test)

Hypoxic ventilatory response in non-smokers and smokers. Individual (small symbols) and mean ± S.E.M. (big symbols) values of the isocapnic hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR) of non-smokers and 12-h-abstinent smokers. HVR values represent ventilatory increases (l min−1) per 1% decrease in O2-saturation and are individually normalized for, i.e. divided by, body mass index (BMI). The difference between smokers and non-smokers was highly significant (Student’s t-test, unpaired) Hypoxic ventilatory response before and after re-exposure to cigarette smoke. Individual (small symbols) and mean ± S.E.M. (big symbols) values of HVR before and after smoking of one cigarette in a subgroup (n = 14) of 12-h-abstinent smokers. The increase in HVR through smoking was highly significant (Wilcoxon-test)

Results

The anthropometric data of age-matched healthy NSM and SM reflected a normal nutritional status and arterial blood pressure values with no significant differences between the two groups (Table 1). The routine parameters of pulmonary function were comparable between both groups and excluded respiratory diseases of relevance for HVR assessment such as bronchial asthma. Mainly due to a lower, albeit non-significant, respiratory frequency (about −20%, P = 0.078), resting minute ventilation was found to be significantly lower in SM (about −13%, P = 0.006) compared to NSM. However, this was not associated with any difference in PetCO2 levels between the two groups because, at similar VO2, SM had almost significantly lower VCO2 (about −8%, P = 0.058) compared to NSM, i.e., SM tended to have a lower respiratory quotient (RQ, P = 0.088). Expectedly, no difference in peripheral arterial O2-saturation at rest was detected between SM and NSM. As a main present finding, isocapnic HVR in terms of both, absolute and normalized values (for individual BMI) showed a highly significant reduction (about −35%) in SM compared to NSM (Fig. 1, Table 1). PetCO2HVR during HVR measurement was well kept at isocapnic levels i.e. at prevailing individual resting normoxic values and, importantly, was virtually identical between SM and NSM (Table 1). Among the traditional vascular risk factors (Table 2) of these two adult groups, plasma lipids including total cholesterol, VLDL, LDL, HDL, and triglycerides as well as systolic and diastolic arterial blood pressure, fasting glucose, HbA1c and homocysteine were all found to be within the normal range with slightly, though significantly, higher levels observed for triglycerides, total cholesterol, and VLDL in SM compared to NSM. Notably, SM had a considerable and significantly higher level of oxLDL (about 68%) compared to NSM. In contrast, the plasma cysteine and cystine as well as the intracellular GSH and GSSG showed no significant smoking-related differences. While SM showed significantly higher plasma levels of circulating ICAM-1 (about +41%) as another non-traditional cardiovascular risk factor, no significant differences were found for VCAM-1 and TNFα levels compared to NSM.
Table 2

Blood cardiovascular risk factors in non-smokers (NSM) and smokers (SM): plasma lipids, oxidized LDL, basal glucose, extra- and intracellular thiol redox state, adhesion molecules and TNF-α

NSMSMa P
Triglycerides(mg 100 ml−1)66.4 ± 5.794.0 ± 7.50.005c
Total cholesterol(mg 100 ml−1)178 ± 7206 ± 80.016b
VLDL(mg 100 ml−1)14.3 ± 1.223.1 ± 3.10.012b
LDL(mg 100 ml−1)121 ± 7140 ± 90.094
oxLDL(U l−1)52.9 ± 5.488.6 ± 13.60.021b
HDL(mg 100 ml−1)44.3 ± 1.845.3 ± 2.60.734
Glucose(mg 100 ml−1)79.7 ± 2.873.5 ± 2.70.115
HbA1c(%)5.30 ± 0.075.25 ± 0.060.590
Homocysteine(μM)9.0 ± 0.59.2 ± 0.50.715
Cysteine(μM)7.66 ± 0.327.47 ± 0.350.687
Cystine(μM)40.8 ± 1.143.3 ± 1.20.126
GSHintracellular (nmol mg−1)15.3 ± 2.218.3 ± 1.80.303
GSSGintracellular (nmol mg−1)2.94 ± 0.422.37 ± 0.500.397
ICAM-1(ng ml−1)378 ± 30533 ± 350.002c
VCAM-1(ng ml−1)791 ± 47726 ± 400.297
TNF-α(pg ml−1)24.3 ± 4.822.4 ± 2.00.717

Mean ± S.E.M.; a>15 cigarettes/day for >8 years with nicotine >0.5 mg and tar >6 mg

bfor P < 0.05, cfor P < 0.01. OxLDL oxidized LDL, GSH reduced glutathione, GSSG glutathione-disulphide in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, ICAM-1 intercellular adhesion molecule 1, VCAM-1 vascular adhesion molecule 1, TNF-α tumor necrosis factor alpha

Blood cardiovascular risk factors in non-smokers (NSM) and smokers (SM): plasma lipids, oxidized LDL, basal glucose, extra- and intracellular thiol redox state, adhesion molecules and TNF-α Mean ± S.E.M.; a>15 cigarettes/day for >8 years with nicotine >0.5 mg and tar >6 mg bfor P < 0.05, cfor P < 0.01. OxLDL oxidized LDL, GSH reduced glutathione, GSSG glutathione-disulphide in peripheral blood mononuclear cells, ICAM-1 intercellular adhesion molecule 1, VCAM-1 vascular adhesion molecule 1, TNF-α tumor necrosis factor alpha In a subgroup of SM (n = 10) we furthermore repeated HVR measurement immediately after smoking one cigarette (Fig. 2). This re-exposure led to a highly significant acute increase in HVR (P = 0.005) as compared to the condition of 12-h-abstinence from cigarettes. The mean increase in HVR evaluated in SM amounted up to 30% (at a rather wide inter-individual variability), thus reaching a level that was not significantly different from that of NSM (without experimental exposure to cigarette smoke). According to explorative correlation analysis, the number of ‘pack years’ (range: 6–60) were neither significantly related to the individual HVR (during abstinence from cigarettes or upon re-exposure to one cigarette, with or without normalization for BMI) nor to any other ventilatory parameter given in Table 1. This was also true when controlling for the factor age in a multivariate regression approach. However, a positive correlation of ‘pack years’ was found to SM’s oxLDL (r = 0.421, P = 0.057) and HbA1C (r = 0.475, P = 0.022) while a negative correlation existed to intracellular GSSG (r = −0.474, P = 0.026). The number of daily smoked cigarettes (range: 15–50) showed no significant relation to any measured parameter.

Discussion

To the best of our knowledge this cross-sectional study is the first to detect a significant and substantial reduction of HVR in healthy, adult long-term SM under conditions of 12-h of abstinence from cigarettes. In addition we demonstrate - well in line with previous findings by others - that upon re-exposure to cigarette smoke HVR is acutely increased to a level that is virtually indistinguishable from that of NSM. This may lead to the important conclusion that a chronic HVR attenuation in SM is obviously masked during daytime smoking habit and therefore may have been overlooked in previous studies with insufficient nicotine abstinence. The difference in HVR between SM and NSM was demonstrated with a power of 0.97 (p ≤ 0.05) at a normal distribution in both groups and a large HVR overlap at the expected wide variability within both the SM and NSM sample (Fig. 1). Unlike the hypercapnic ventilatory response, the isocapnic HVR as a measure of peripheral carotid chemoreceptor O2-sensitivity is considered as a quite stable, partly hereditary, individual feature with a uniquely wide inter-subject variability [2, 3, 7, 8] which - in line with a major chemoreceptor contribution to resting ventilator drives [2-5] - is considered to determine (in-) tolerance to high altitude and hypoxemia with pulmonary diseases [1, 6, 9, 10, 12, 13]. Interestingly, smoking may aggravate the physiological O2-desaturation during sleep [39]. A low HVR in SM may therefore possibly represent an understudied, novel link between smoking and the risk for aggravated O2-desaturation and play a potential role within the complex pathophysiology of COPD or of weaning from artificial respiration. Our finding may therefore warrant more detailed human studies addressing effects of smoking duration, intensity and cessation, possible interaction of gender, aging and additional cardiovascular risk factors, especially those associated with altered HVR like hypertension and obesity [37]. Measurement of ventilator drives in humans is well-known to be easily confounded by several factors, many of which were carefully considered in this study. 1) Isocapnia during HVR was well controlled, i.e. the PetCO2 was kept at the level observed during normoxic baseline and was virtually identical between SM and NSM (Table 1). 2) Plasma potassium levels which affect peripheral chemoreceptors were not significantly different between SM and NSM (4.07 ± 0.06 vs 4.32 ± 0.12 mM). 3) We furthermore showed, that the plasma thiol (cysteine and homocysteine) and cystine as well as the intracellular levels of GSH and GSSG were comparable between SM and NSM (Table 2). This is important as interventional studies by us and others have demonstrated a large HVR increase with acute supplementation of thiol-compounds beside a significant correlation between HVR and the intracellular GSH [35, 36]. Though a smoking-related difference in the thiol redox state has previously been reported [33, 34], the present study conducted in a strictly postabsorptive and smoking-abstinent state demonstrated good comparability of the redox state between SM and NSM. Furthermore, SM and NSM had similar whole blood levels of homocysteine, a thiol compound that clearly interacts with other protein- (albumin-) bound thiols like cysteine by disulphide exchange [40]. 4) Another factor influencing HVR is plasma glucose, which was shown to be sensed along with pO2 by peripheral chemoreceptor type 1 cells, such, that hypoglycemia massively increases the HVR in humans [38, 41]. The present data were obtained at comparable, fasted blood glucose and HbA1c levels with a tendency towards lower glucose levels in SM, which would rather increase than decreases HVR (Table 2). Possible mechanisms behind the observed HVR attenuation within the chemoreceptors in adult SM remain speculative at present and may include (epigenetically) altered expression of hypoxia-inducible factor 1α and/or 2α [3], an alteration of the β2-nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunit in the chemoreceptors (or brainstem centers) as a possible target of nicotine [22, 23], dopamine-mediated alterations following an upregulation of the tyrosine hydroxylase within the carotid body as shown in developing rats after nicotine exposure [42], or other factors. Interestingly, HVR in SM at both conditions tested (i.e. during abstinence or upon re-exposure to a single cigarette) was unrelated to pack years (range: 6–60 pack years) or daily smoked cigarettes (range: 15–50), even when controlling for the factor age (range: 22–53 years), which appears to exclude a simple dose-dependent mechanism. At present, we cannot strictly exclude a rather speculative effect of slight elevations of plasma lipids, oxLDL, or ICAM-1 in SM compared to NSM, because these factors may be associated with endothelial dysfunction, which may not spare out the carotid body arteries. However, HVR was unrelated to these risk factors and considerably higher lipid levels have previously been demonstrated not to affect HVR [43]. As a limitation, this study includes no data on nicotine or cotinine plasma levels to quantify overnight nicotine elimination, i.e. compliance to abstinence from cigarettes or to demonstrate the nicotine increases upon re-exposure to cigarettes. However, our study demonstrates virtually identical plasma thiol (cysteine) levels between SM and NSM on arrival at our laboratory at 8:00 a.m. This may exclude smoking within 1 h prior to blood sampling, because plasma thiol (cysteine) decreases by >50% upon smoking of a single cigarette and takes one hour to return to pre-smoking level [34]. Given that no cigarette was smoked on test day after an 8-h-sleep between 7:00 (reminding phone call) and 8:00 a.m. and that subjects were under observation at the laboratory thereafter until completion of HVR between 9:00 and 10:00 a.m., a 10-h-abstinence from cigarettes can be assumed. The ‘last’ cigarette was reported by phone call or SMS before 11:00 p.m. on the evening before which would yield a 12 h abstinence. In addition, beside the thiol plasma level, our data on the intracellular thiol redox state show similar levels between SM and NSM. Even with excellent compliance we cannot presently exclude confounding effect of the nicotine metabolites like cotinine (with an in-vivo half-life of around 20 h) and, furthermore, of carboxyhemoglobin (CO-Hb) not detected by the peripheral O2-saturation measurement. Because the nicotine clearance depends on various factors including age, gender, hepatic function and blood flow (with large postprandial increase), renal function and factors within the smoking habit itself, further detailed studies on the present observation appear warranted [31, 32]. Thereby, beside the individual smoking history the early childhood cigarette smoke or intrauterine nicotine exposure may have to be assessed as well, to identify relevant factors in smoking-related HVR alterations (chronic reduction as opposed to acute enhancement). Furthermore, due to a lack of studies in humans, we can only speculate on the finding of an almost significantly lower VCO2 and RQ (at similar VO2) in SM compared to NSM, which obviously yielded similar PetCO2 at significantly lower VE in SM. A previous study in rats has described a (sub-) acute lowering of RQ through nicotine at unchanged resting energy expenditure [44]. Whether this effect is relevant to humans and (still) present (or reversed) upon the presently studied short-term nicotine abstinence, remains unclear at present. Importantly, the present study at the same time confirmed an acute HVR increase upon (re-) exposure of SM to cigarette smoke to an extent that was sufficient to completely mask the chronic HVR attenuation discussed above (Fig. 2). In fact, the earlier study by Kawakami et al. [26] comparing monozygotic twin SM and NSM, unfortunately, failed to detect differences in HVR, likely because the only 3-h-abstinence from cigarettes used in that study was insufficient to eliminate acute stimulatory affects. Such acute HVR enhancement was, however, subsequently shown, in both SM and NSM as well as for mammals, including one study from the same group [27-30].

Conclusions

In summary, the present observational study provides evidence for a substantial attenuation of HVR in healthy adult male SM after abstinence from cigarettes, which appears to be masked by (repetitive) smoking during daytime. This may represent an overlooked link between smoking and impaired control of O2-homeostasis in SM during times of abstinence like sleep, when behavioral ventilatory drives are minimal [6, 39]. Such impaired protection against O2-desaturation in SM may be especially critical in hypoxemic clinical conditions like COPD.
  44 in total

Review 1.  Peripheral chemoreceptors in health and disease.

Authors:  Nanduri R Prabhakar; Ying-Jie Peng
Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)       Date:  2004-01

2.  Effect of carotid endarterectomy on carotid chemoreceptor and baroreceptor function in man.

Authors:  J G Wade; C P Larson; R F Hickey; W K Ehrenfeld; J W Severinghaus
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1970-04-09       Impact factor: 91.245

3.  Normal oxyhemoglobin saturation during sleep. How low does it go?

Authors:  R E Gries; L J Brooks
Journal:  Chest       Date:  1996-12       Impact factor: 9.410

4.  Depression of peripheral chemosensitivity by a dopaminergic mechanism in patients with obstructive sleep apnoea syndrome.

Authors:  S Osanai; Y Akiba; S Fujiuchi; H Nakano; H Matsumoto; Y Ohsaki; K Kikuchi
Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  1999-02       Impact factor: 16.671

5.  Ageing and cardiorespiratory response to hypoxia.

Authors:  François J Lhuissier; Florence Canouï-Poitrine; Jean-Paul Richalet
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2012-08-20       Impact factor: 5.182

Review 6.  Sensing hypoxia: physiology, genetics and epigenetics.

Authors:  Nanduri R Prabhakar
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2013-03-04       Impact factor: 5.182

7.  Hypoxic ventilatory drive in normal man.

Authors:  J V Weil; E Byrne-Quinn; I E Sodal; W O Friesen; B Underhill; G F Filley; R F Grover
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1970-06       Impact factor: 14.808

8.  Nicotine increases chemoreflex sensitivity to hypoxia in non-smokers.

Authors:  Jean-François Argacha; Olivier Xhaët; Marko Gujic; Dionysios Adamopoulos; Sofia Beloka; Celine Dreyfuss; Jean-Paul Degaute; Philippe van de Borne
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 4.844

9.  Hereditary aspects of decreased hypoxic response.

Authors:  D D Collins; C H Scoggin; C W Zwillich; J V Weil
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1978-07       Impact factor: 14.808

10.  Functional and developmental studies of the peripheral arterial chemoreceptors in rat: effects of nicotine and possible relation to sudden infant death syndrome.

Authors:  H Holgert; T Hökfelt; T Hertzberg; H Lagercrantz
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1995-08-01       Impact factor: 11.205

View more
  2 in total

1.  Effect of Hypercapnia, an Element of Obstructive Respiratory Disorder, on Pancreatic Cancer Chemoresistance and Progression.

Authors:  Avinoam Nevler; Samantha Z Brown; David Nauheim; Carla Portocarrero; Ulrich Rodeck; Jonathan Bassig; Christopher W Schultz; Grace A McCarthy; Harish Lavu; Theresa P Yeo; Charles J Yeo; Jonathan R Brody
Journal:  J Am Coll Surg       Date:  2020-02-11       Impact factor: 6.113

2.  Aging, tobacco use and lung damages.

Authors:  Sonia Rouatbi
Journal:  Tunis Med       Date:  2022 avril
  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.