TY - JOUR PY - 2014// TI - Effects of elevated oxygen and carbon dioxide partial pressures on respiratory function and cognitive performance JO - Journal of applied physiology A1 - Gill, Matthew A1 - Natoli, Michael J. A1 - Vacchiano, Charles A1 - Macleod, David B. A1 - Ikeda, Keita A1 - Qin, Michael A1 - Pollock, Neal W. A1 - Moon, Richard E. A1 - Pieper, Carl A1 - Vann, Richard D. SP - 406 EP - 412 VL - 117 IS - 4 N2 - Hyperoxia during diving has been suggested to exacerbate hypercapnic narcosis and promote unconsciousness. We tested this hypothesis in male volunteers (12 at rest, 10 at 75 W cycle ergometer exercise) breathing each of four gases. Inspired PO2 (PIO2) was 0.21 and 1.3 atmospheres (atm) without or with an individual subject's maximum tolerable inspired CO2 (PICO2 = 0.055-0.085 atm). Measurements included end-tidal CO2 partial pressure (PETCO2), rating of perceived discomfort (RPD), expired minute ventilation (VE), and cognitive function assessed by auditory n-back test. The most prominent finding was, irrespective of PETCO2, that minute ventilation was 8-9 Lpm greater for rest or exercise with a PIO2 of 1.3 atm compared to 0.21 atm. When breathing 1.3 atm PIO2, resting subjects (but not exercising subjects) experienced more discomfort (RPD) at lower values of PETCO2 but not at higher PETCO2. PIO2 did not significantly affect the relationship of n-back score to PETCO2. Subjects completed 66 hyperoxic hypercapnic trials without incident, but five subjects stopped prematurely due to serious symptoms (tunnel vision, vision loss, dizziness, panic, exhaustion, or near-syncope) during 69 normoxic hypercapnic trials (p=0.0582). Serious symptoms during hypercapnic trials occurred only during normoxia.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 8750-7587 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00995.2013 ID - ref1 ER -