Abstract

Changes in the cardiorespiratory indicators due to the prolonged (25 min) inhalation of a respiratory mixture with an exponentially falling (from 20.9% to 10%) oxygen concentration were studied in healthy young men. The efficiency of oxygen uptake (as the ventilatory equivalent of O2) in the lungs has been shown to fall particularly promptly (within the first 2–5 min). Individual manifestations of this fall were variable (ranging from 22 to 84% of the baseline data) and driven, to a considerable degree, by the subject’s current level of alveolar ventilation, mobilizing its urgent reserve to improve the ventilation-perfusion relations in the lungs. The subsequent response as a growth in the heart rate (HR) recorded in 100% of cases was delayed relative to the start of hypoxic exposure and combined with increased hypoxemia marked as a decrease in the blood oxygen saturation of hemoglobin. The individual HR growth in response to hypoxia ranged from 8 to 43% of the baseline level and was significantly related to the current level of diastolic arterial blood pressure. The hypoxic ventilatory response was expressed only in 71% of cases, including the 15% when it was reversed (decreased) against the background of a concomitant decrease in the respiratory frequency.

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