Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5925873 | Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2016 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Of the factors determining blood gases, only alveolar ventilation (VËA) is amenable to manipulation. However, current physiology text books neither describe how breath-by-breath VËA can be measured, nor how it can be precisely controlled in spontaneously breathing subjects. And such control must be effected independent of minute ventilation (VËE) and the pattern of breathing. Control of VËA requires the deliberate partition of inhaled gas between the alveoli and the anatomical deadspace. This distribution is accomplished by sequential gas delivery (SGD): each breath consists of a chosen volume of 'fresh' gas followed by previously exhaled gas. Control of VËA through SGD is a simple, inexpensive, yet powerful tool with many applications. Here we describe how to implement SGD, how it precisely controls VËA, and consequently how it controls arterial blood gases.
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Authors
Joseph A. Fisher, Steve Iscoe, James Duffin,