Is voluntary control of breathing impaired in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease?
1. To assess whether voluntary control of breathing is impaired in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, a group of such patients performed a tracking task, requiring volitional control of respiratory muscles. 2. Eight patients (mean age 60 years; mean ratio of forced expiratory volume in 1 s to forced vital capacity = 31%) took part in the study. Five of the seven patients in whom blood gas measurements were made were mildly hypoxaemic (PaO2 = 53-71 mmHg), and one of these was hypercapnic (PaCO2 = 55 mmHg). Each subject performed a compensatory ventilatory tracking task using a tracking system which comprised a fixed target displayed on a monitor screen and a cursor moving in a line bisecting the target. The position of the cursor was perturbed by a forcing function and patients were required to keep the cursor on the target by breathing in and out of a spirometer. 3. To allow for any non-specific deficiency in motor control, patients performed a similar manual tracking
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