Neural respiratory drive in chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension: Effect of balloon pulmonary angioplasty

Respir Physiol Neurobiol. 2022 May:299:103857. doi: 10.1016/j.resp.2022.103857. Epub 2022 Feb 1.

Abstract

Excessive ventilation (V̇E) during exercise, ascribed to heightened neural ventilatory drive and/or to increased "wasted" ventilation, is a feature of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH). In selected CTEPH patients, balloon pulmonary angioplasty (BPA) allows near-normalization of resting haemodynamic parameters but does not allow excess exercise hyperventilation to normalize. Neural ventilatory drive can be estimated by studying how arterial PCO2 (PaCO2), end-tidal PCO2 (PETCO2), V̇E and CO2 output (V̇CO2) change across the exercise-to-recovery transition during a cardiopulmonary exercise test. Increased "wasted" ventilation can be quantified by the physiological dead space fraction of tidal volume (VD/VT) calculated with the Enghoff simplification of the Bohr equation. These measurements were made before and after BPA in 22 CTEPH patients without significant cardiac and/or pulmonary comorbidities. Our observations suggest that before BPA, excessive hyperventilation was secondary to both heightened neural ventilatory drive and increased "wasted" ventilation; after BPA, measurements made across the exercise-to-recovery transition suggest that heightened neural ventilatory drive was no longer present.

Keywords: Chronic thromboembolic hypertension; Exercise; Hyperventilation; Ventilatory neural drive.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Angioplasty
  • Chronic Disease
  • Exercise Test
  • Humans
  • Hypertension, Pulmonary* / therapy
  • Hyperventilation
  • Lung
  • Pulmonary Embolism* / complications
  • Pulmonary Embolism* / therapy