학술논문

Exposure to Non-Steady-State Oxygen Is Reflected in Changes to Arterial Blood Gas Values, Prefrontal Cortical Activity, and Systemic Cytokine Levels
Document Type
article
Source
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, Vol 25, Iss 6, p 3279 (2024)
Subject
hypobaric
oxygen
arterial
brain
neurovascular
spectroscopy
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Chemistry
QD1-999
Language
English
ISSN
1422-0067
1661-6596
Abstract
Onboard oxygen-generating systems (OBOGSs) provide increased inspired oxygen (FiO2) to mitigate the risk of neurologic injury in high altitude aviators. OBOGSs can deliver highly variable oxygen concentrations oscillating around a predetermined FiO2 set point, even when the aircraft cabin altitude is relatively stable. Steady-state exposure to 100% FiO2 evokes neurovascular vasoconstriction, diminished cerebral perfusion, and altered electroencephalographic activity. Whether non-steady-state FiO2 exposure leads to similar outcomes is unknown. This study characterized the physiologic responses to steady-state and non-steady-state FiO2 during normobaric and hypobaric environmental pressures emulating cockpit pressures within tactical aircraft. The participants received an indwelling radial arterial catheter while exposed to steady-state or non-steady-state FiO2 levels oscillating ± 15% of prescribed set points in a hypobaric chamber. Steady-state exposure to 21% FiO2 during normobaria produced arterial blood gas values within the anticipated ranges. Exposure to non-steady-state FiO2 led to PaO2 levels higher upon cessation of non-steady-state FiO2 than when measured during steady-state exposure. This pattern was consistent across all FiO2 ranges, at each barometric condition. Prefrontal cortical activation during cognitive testing was lower following exposure to non-steady-state FiO2 >50% and iO2 levels >50% reduced prefrontal cortical brain activation during the cognitive challenge, consistent with an evoked pattern of neurovascular constriction and dilation.