Abstract
The aim of this study was to determine during moderate exercise whether response to
the CO2 rebreathing test was dependent on differences in breathing pattern components among
individuals recorded before the test and whether differences in tidal volume response
and/or breathing frequency response to CO2 during the test could influence their ventilatory response to CO2. Ten healthy, sedentary
male subjects, 20 to 34 years old, participated in the study. Ventilatory response
to CO2 was measured by the CO2 rebreathing method (7% CO2, 50% O2). The measure-ments of breathing pattern components and CO2 rebreathing were made during mild steady State exercise: V̇CO2 = 20 ml·kg-1min-1. We measured the following: 1) tidal volume (VTex) and breathing frequency (fex)
before CO2 rebreathing and 2) ventilatory response to CO2 (SVEex), tidal volume response to CO2 (SVTex), and breathing frequency response to CO2 (Sfex) during the CO2 rebreathing test. The results showed that SVEex was correlated with VTex (r = 0.89,
p < 0.001), fex (r = -0.79, p < 0.01), and Sfex (r = 0.83, p < 0.01). There was no
correlation between SVEex and SVTex. A curvilinear relationship existed between SVEex
and alveolar ventilation calculated during exercise (r = 0.87, p < 0.001), but there
was no correlation with dead space. Sfex was positively correlated with VTex (r =
0.68, p < 0.05) and negatively with fex (r = -0.70, p < 0.05). We concluded that,
during moderate exercise, higher tidal volumes measured before CO2 rebreathing were associated with higher response to the CO2 rebreathing test and consequently with higher ventilatory response to CO2. The breathing frequency response to CO2 measured during CO2 rebreathing also influenced the ventilatory response to CO2. Differences in breathing pattern components thus could play a part in the differences
in ventilatory response to CO2 among individuals as measured by the CO2 rebreathing test during exercise. If the CO2 rebreathing test is used to measure ventilatory response to CO2 during exercise, it seems necessary to take into consideration differences in breathing
pattern among subjects.
Key words
Breathing pattern - exercise - ventilatory response to CO2