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J R Soc Med 1988;81:277-279
© 1988 Royal Society of Medicine

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Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, Vol 81, Issue 5 277-279, Copyright © 1988 by Royal Society of Medicine


ORIGINAL ARTICLES

The 'think test': a further technique to elicit hyperventilation

PG Nixon and LJ Freeman
Charing Cross Hospital (Fulham), Hammsersmith, London.

Hyperventilation can undermine cardiovascular homeostasis by generating autonomic imbalance, sympathetic dominance, hypokalaemia, and intracellular alkalosis with calcium ion shifts. The role of hyperventilation in episodic disorders such as arrhythmia and coronary vasospasm can be difficult to identify if the patient does not present in an attack and so a provocation challenge is required. Today, the standard challenge is the forced hyperventilation provocation test (FHPT). A capnograph enables the resting end-tidal PCO2 to be compared with the level 3 min after the period of overbreathing. We report the use of a patient-specific challenge. After the FHPT, the subject is invited to close his eyes and think about the circumstances of an attack, feelings and sensations experienced (breathing is not mentioned) or topics that were seen to disturb the rhythm of breathing when the medical history was taken. A fall of end-tidal PCO2 of 10 mmHg or more lasting at least one minute was taken as a positive response. Out of 57 patients with cardiovascular symptoms suggesting a hypocapnic influence, resting hypocapnia (end-tidal PCO2 = 30 mmHg) was present in 3 (5%). Of the remaining 54, the FHPT was positive in 16 (30%) and the 'think test' in 33 (61%). This suggests that patient-specific stimulation has advantages over an unspecific challenge in testing for episodic hypocapnia.
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Arch Intern MedHome page
N. M. Kaplan
Anxiety-Induced Hyperventilation: A Common Cause of Symptoms in Patients With Hypertension
Arch Intern Med, May 12, 1997; 157(9): 945 - 948.
[Abstract] [PDF]