Effect of Supplemental Oxygen on Physiological Responses to Exercise in Fibrotic Interstitial Lung Disease

Yael Baidats, Shir Kadosh, Andrew M Jones, Daryl Wilkerson, Ariela Velner, Ronen Reuveny, Michael J Segel

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

PURPOSE: We studied the effect of O2 supplementation on physiological response to exercise in patients with moderate to severe interstitial lung disease (ILD).

METHODS: 13 patients (age 66 ± 10 yrs., 7 males) with ILD (TLC 71 ± 22% predicted, carbon monoxide diffusion capacity (DLCO) 44 ± 16% predicted) and 13 healthy individuals (age 50 ± 17 yrs., 7 males) were tested. ILD patients performed symptom-limited cardiopulmonary exercise tests and constant work-rate tests (CWRTs) at 80% of the work-rate (WR) at the gas exchange threshold (GET). Tests breathing room air (RA, 21% O2) were compared to tests performed breathing 30% O2. Oxygen-uptake (V̇O2) kinetics were calculated from the CWRT results.

RESULTS: In the ILD group, peak WR, peak V̇O2 and V̇O2 at the GET improved significantly when breathing 30% O2 compared to RA (mean ± SD 66 ± 23 vs 75 ± 26 watts, 15 ± 2 vs 17 ± 4 ml/kg/min and 854 ± 232 vs 932 ± 245 ml/min; p = 0.004, p = 0.001 and p = 0.01, respectively). O2 saturation (SPO2%) at peak exercise was higher with 30% O2 (97 ± 4% vs 88 ± 9%, p = 0.002). The time constant (tau) of V̇O2 kinetics was faster in ILD patients while breathing 30% O2 (41 ± 10 sec) compared to RA (52 ± 14 sec, p = 0.003). There was a negative linear relation between tau and SPO2% with RA (r = -0.76, p = 0.006) and while breathing 30% O2 (r = -0.68, p = 0.02).

CONCLUSIONS: Using a clinically applicable level of O2 supplementation (30%) improved maximal, aerobic exercise capacity and V̇O2 kinetics in ILD patients, likely due to increased blood O2 content subsequently increasing the O2 delivery to the working muscles.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2093-2102
Number of pages10
JournalMedicine and Science in Sports and Exercise
Volume56
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2024

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