E. Blochsalisbury et al., AIR HUNGER INDUCED BY ACUTE INCREASE IN P-CO2 ADAPTS TO CHRONIC ELEVATION OF P-CO2 IN VENTILATED HUMANS, Journal of applied physiology, 81(2), 1996, pp. 949-956
Brief increases in arterial PCO2 (Pa-CO2) (lasting several minutes) pr
oduce a sensation of respiratory discomfort (air hunger). It is not kn
own whether air hunger adapts to chronic changes in Pa-CO2. This study
tested whether the level of end-tidal PCO2 (PET(CO2)) required to evo
ke air hunger would increase with chronic elevation of PET(CO2) (lasti
ng several days). Four ventilator-dependent subjects participated in a
2-wk study during which they were ventilated with air (placebo) or ai
r rich in CO2 (CO2 exposure). Average resting PET(CO2) during control
periods was 25 Torr (typical for such patients); PET(CO2) was 15 Torr
higher during CO2 exposure. Ventilation and arterial PO2 did not diffe
r between conditions. Periodically, we performed tests in which subjec
ts rated the intensity of air hunger induced by brief increases in PET
(CO2). The increase in PET(CO2) required to elicit a given air hunger
rating during CO2 exposure also increased by similar to 15 Torr. That
is, subjects' sensation of air hunger fully adapted to the chronic inc
rease in PET(CO2). Arterial pH did not fully return to control values
during CO2 exposure. Accommodation in the chemoreceptors and neural pa
thways that subserve air hunger sensation may explain the adaptation o
f air hunger.