PMID: 8947071Nov 1, 1996Paper

Voluntary decrease in breathing frequency in exercising asthmatic subjects

The European Respiratory Journal
F CeugnietJ Gallego

Abstract

Exercise rehabilitation programmes are increasingly recommended in young asthmatics, but it is unclear whether or not training should incorporate instructions on breathing pattern. In this study, we examined the effects of voluntarily decreasing breathing frequency on their ventilatory equivalents for oxygen and carbon dioxide (minute ventilation (V'E)/oxygen consumption (V'O2) and V'E/CO2 production (V'CO2), respectively), noninvasively determined physiological dead space/tidal volume (VD/VT) and dyspnoea. Fifteen young asthmatic subjects were assigned to two groups: low frequency breathing (LFB) and controls. They first underwent an exercise test at a cardiac frequency of 150 beats x min(-1). They were trained at this level for nine sessions. LFB subjects were instructed to decrease respiratory frequency by 40% during exercise. Control subjects received no instructions. A second test was then performed in the same conditions. LFB subjects decreased V'E/V'O2, V'E/V'CO2 and VD/VT by 22, 19 and 12%, respectively. Arterial oxygen saturation (Sa,O2) fell to 89+/-4% and end-tidal carbon dioxide tension (PET,CO2) rose to 6.5+/-0.7 kPa (49+/-5 mmHg). In controls, these variables were identical in the two tests. Dyspnoea was lower in ...Continue Reading

Citations

Jun 13, 2015·Disease Markers·Paloma Lopes Francisco ParazziJose Dirceu Ribeiro
Oct 9, 2003·Behavior Modification·Thomas Ritz, Walton T Roth
Nov 16, 2011·Expert Review of Respiratory Medicine·John BurgessShyamali C Dharmage

❮ Previous
Next ❯

Related Concepts

Related Feeds

Asthma

This feed focuses in Asthma in which your airways narrow and swell. This can make breathing difficult and trigger coughing, wheezing and shortness of breath.

Allergy and Asthma

Allergy and asthma are inflammatory disorders that are triggered by the activation of an allergen-specific regulatory t cell. These t cells become activated when allergens are recognized by allergen-presenting cells. Here is the latest research on allergy and asthma.