D. Sajkov et al., COMPARISON OF EFFECTS OF SUSTAINED ISOCAPNIC HYPOXIA ON VENTILATION IN MEN AND WOMEN, Journal of applied physiology, 83(2), 1997, pp. 599-607
Sleep-related respiratory disturbances are more common in men than in
premenopausal women. This might, in part, be due to different suscepti
bilities to the respiratory depressant effects of hypoxia. Therefore,
we compared ventilation during 10 min of baseline room-air breathing a
nd 20-min sustained isocapnic hypoxia (fractional inspired O-2 = 11%,
arterial saturation of O-2 approximate to 80%) followed by 10 min of b
reathing 100% O-2 in 10 normal men and in 10 women in the follicular p
hase of the menstrual cycle. Control measurements were made during two
transitions from room air (10 min) to 100% O-2 (10 min) and averaged.
Inspired minute ventilation (VI) after 2 min of hypoxia was the same
in men and women [131 +/- 6.1% baseline for men, 136 +/- 7.7% baseline
for women; not significant (NS)I and declined to the same level after
20 min (115 +/- 5.0% baseline for men, 116 +/- 6.6% baseline for wome
n; NS) associated with a similar decline in inspiratory time and tidal
volume. Breathing frequency did not change. VI decreased transiently
during subsequent 100% O-2 breathing in both men and women, associated
with reduced frequency and duty cycle and increased expiratory time.
The fall in VI was significantly greater than that observed during con
trol hyperoxia experiments in men but not in women. We conclude that v
entilatory responses to sustained isocapnic hypoxia do not differ betw
een awake healthy men and women in the follicular phase of their menst
rual cycle. However, after termination of isocapnic hypoxia, men appea
r to depress their ventilation to a greater degree than women.