RESUMO
We hypothesized that (1) in healthy humans subjected to intermittent positive pressure non-invasive ventilation, changes in the ventilator trigger sensitivity would be associated with increased scalene activity, (2) if properly processed - through inspiratory phase-locked averaging - surface electromyograms (EMG) of the scalenes would reliably detect and quantify this, (3) there would be a correlation between dyspnea and scalene EMG. Surface and intramuscular EMG activity of scalene muscles were measured in 10 subjects. They breathed quietly through a face mask for 10min and then were connected to a mechanical ventilator. Recordings were performed during three 15-min epochs where the subjects breathed against an increasingly negative pressure trigger (-5%, -10% and -15% of maximal inspiratory pressure). With increasing values of the inspiratory trigger, inspiratory efforts, dyspnea and the scalene activity increased significantly. The scalene EMG activity level was correlated with the esophageal pressure time product and with dyspnea intensity. Inspiration-adjusted surface EMG averaging could be useful to detect small increases of the scalene muscles activity during mechanical ventilation.
Assuntos
Inalação/fisiologia , Músculos do Pescoço/fisiologia , Mecânica Respiratória/fisiologia , Adulto , Eletromiografia/métodos , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Respiração com Pressão Positiva/métodos , Respiração Artificial/métodos , Processamento de Sinais Assistido por ComputadorRESUMO
The role of nonrespiratory peripheral afferents in dyspnea perception has not been fully elucidated yet. Our hypothesis is that fatigue-induced activation of limb muscle metaboreceptors served by group IV fine afferent fibers may impact on respiratory effort perception. We studied 12 healthy subjects breathing against progressive inspiratory resistive loads (10, 18, 30, 40, and 90 cmH(2)O x l(-1) x s) before and after inducing low-frequency fatigue of quadriceps muscle by repeating sustained contractions at > or = 80% of maximal voluntary contraction. Subjects also underwent a sham protocol while performing two loaded breathing runs without muscle fatigue in between. During the loaded breathing, while subjects mimicked the quiet breathing pattern using a visual feedback, ventilation, tidal volume, respiratory frequency, pleural pressure swings, arterial oxygen saturation, end-tidal partial pressure of CO(2), and dyspnea by a Borg scale were recorded. Compared with prefatigue, limb muscle fatigue resulted in a higher increase in respiratory effort perception for any given ventilation, tidal volume, respiratory frequency, pleural pressure swings, end-tidal partial pressure of CO(2), and arterial oxygen saturation. No difference between the two runs was observed with the sham protocol. The present data support the hypothesis that fatigue of limb muscles increases respiratory effort perception associated with loaded breathing, likely by the activation of limb muscle metaboreceptors.