International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Mar 2024)

Exposure to Non-Steady-State Oxygen Is Reflected in Changes to Arterial Blood Gas Values, Prefrontal Cortical Activity, and Systemic Cytokine Levels

  • Elizabeth G. Damato,
  • Joseph S. Piktel,
  • Seunghee P. Margevicius,
  • Seth J. Fillioe,
  • Lily K. Norton,
  • Alireza Abdollahifar,
  • Kingman P. Strohl,
  • David S. Burch,
  • Michael J. Decker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25063279
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 6
p. 3279

Abstract

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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.

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