Mechanical ventilatory constraints during incremental cycle exercise in human pregnancy: implications for respiratory sensation

妊娠期递增负荷自行车运动期间的机械通气限制:对呼吸感觉的影响

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to identify the physiological mechanisms of exertional respiratory discomfort (breathlessness) in pregnancy by comparing ventilatory (breathing pattern, airway function, operating lung volumes, oesophageal pressure (P(oes))-derived indices of respiratory mechanics) and perceptual (breathlessness intensity) responses to incremental cycle exercise in 15 young, healthy women in the third trimester (TM(3); between 34 and 38 weeks gestation) and again 4-5 months postpartum (PP). During pregnancy, resting inspiratory capacity (IC) increased (P < 0.01) and end-expiratory lung volume decreased (P < 0.001), with no associated change in total lung capacity (TLC) or static respiratory muscle strength. This permitted greater tidal volume (V(T)) expansion throughout exercise in TM(3), while preserving the relationship between contractile respiratory muscle effort (tidal P(oes) swing expressed as a percentage of maximum inspiratory pressure (P(Imax))) and thoracic volume displacement (V(T) expressed as a percentage of vital capacity) and between breathlessness and ventilation . At the highest equivalent work rate (HEWR = 128 +/- 5 W) in TM(3) compared with PP: , tidal P(oes)/P(Imax) and breathlessness intensity ratings increased by 10.2 l min(-1) (P < 0.001), 8.8%P(Imax) (P < 0.05) and 0.9 Borg units (P < 0.05), respectively. Pulmonary resistance was not increased at rest or during exercise at the HEWR in TM(3), despite marked increases in mean tidal inspiratory and expiratory flow rates, suggesting increased bronchodilatation. Dynamic mechanical constraints on V(T) expansion (P < 0.05) with associated increased breathlessness intensity ratings (P < 0.05) were observed near peak exercise in TM(3) compared with PP. IN CONCLUSION: (1) pregnancy-induced increases in exertional breathlessness reflected the normal awareness of increased and contractile respiratory muscle effort; (2) mechanical adaptations of the respiratory system, including recruitment of resting IC and increased bronchodilatation, accommodated the increased V(T) while preserving effort-displacement and breathlessness-VE relationships; and (3) dynamic mechanical ventilatory constraints contributed to respiratory discomfort near the limits of tolerance in late gestation.

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