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Department of Pulmonary Physiology, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, Nedlands; and West Australian Sleep Disorders Research Institute, Queen Elizabeth II Medical Centre, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Submitted 10 November 2008 ; accepted in final form 13 August 2009
Hyperpnea with exercise or hypercapnia causes phasic contraction of abdominal muscles, potentially lengthening the diaphragm at end expiration and unloading it during inspiration. Muscle efficiency in vitro varies with load, fiber length, and precontraction stretch. To examine whether these properties of muscle contractility determine diaphragm efficiency (Effdi) in vivo, we measured Effdi in six healthy adults breathing air and during progressive hypercapnia at three levels of end-tidal PCO2 with mean values of 48 (SD 2), 55 (SD 2), and 61 (SD 1) Torr. Effdi was estimated as the ratio of diaphragm power (
di) [the product of mean inspiratory transdiaphragmatic pressure, diaphragm volume change (
Vdi) measured fluoroscopically, and 1/inspiratory duration (TI–1)] to activation [root mean square values of inspiratory diaphragm electromyogram (RMSdi) measured from esophageal electrodes]. At maximum hypercapnea relative to breathing air, 1) gastric pressure and diaphragm length at end expiration (Pgee and Ldiee, respectively) increased 1.4 (SD 0.2) and 1.13 (SD 0.08) times, (P < 0.01 for both); 2) inspiratory change (
) in Pg decreased from 4.5 (SD 2.2) to –7.7 (SD 3.8) cmH2O (P < 0.001); 3)
Vdi·TI–1,
di, RMSdi, and Effdi increased 2.7 (SD 0.6), 4.9 (SD 1.8), 2.6 (SD 0.9), and 1.8 (SD 0.3) times, respectively (P < 0.01 for all); and 4) net and inspiratory
di were not different (P = 0.4). Effdi was predicted from Ldiee (P < 0.001), Pgee (P < 0.001),
Pg·TI–1 (P = 0.03), and
Pg (P = 0.04) (r2 = 0.52) (multivariate regression analysis). We conclude that, with hypercapnic hyperpnea, 1)
47% of the maximum increase of
di was attributable to increased Effdi; 2) Effdi increased due to preinspiratory lengthening and inspiratory unloading of the diaphragm, consistent with muscle behavior in vitro; 3) passive recoil of the diaphragm did not contribute to inspiratory
di or Effdi; and 4) phasic abdominal muscle activity with hyperpnea reduces diaphragm energy consumption.
diaphragm flow, pressure and electrical activity; ventilatory loads
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