INSTITUTE OF PHYSICS PUBLISHING PHYSIOLOGICAL MEASUREMENT
Physiol. Meas. 25 (2004) 1189–1197 PII: S0967-3334(04)77163-4
Measurement reliability of highly
variable physiological responses to
experimentally-manipulated gas fractions
John Terblanche
1
, Andreas Fahlman, Kathryn H Myburgh and
Sue Jackson
Department of Physiological Sciences, University of Stellenbosch, Private Bag X1,
Matieland 7602, South Africa
E-mail: jst@sun.ac.za
Received 4 March 2004, accepted for publication 3 June 2004
Published 6 August 2004
Online at stacks.iop.org/PM/25/1189
doi:10.1088/0967-3334/25/5/009
Abstract
Ventilatory and cardiac responses to changing inhaled gas fractions are
notoriously variable within individuals. Such variation can confound clinical
diagnoses and hypotheses about human adaptation. In this study we use a
cardiac (HHR) and a ventilatory (HVR) measure of physiological sensitivity
to an experimentally manipulated oxygen concentration (8% O
2
), to compare
variation (a) within and between individuals, (b) within and between days and
(c) within and between physiological parameters. To explore the sources of
variation, we use the coefficient of variation (CV, %), repeatability (R, intra-
class correlation coefficient, %) and repeated-measures analyses of variance.
Both the HVR and the HHR are significantly repeatable (HVR: R = 0.76–0.92;
HHR: R = 0.35–0.76) and equally variable within and between days. Its high
R suggests that the HVR displays greater between-individual variation relative
to within-individual variation than does the HHR. The HVR is thus a more
reliable measure of physiological sensitivity to hypoxia than is the HHR. We
suggest how these results may inform experimental design, and suggest how to
avoid stochastic and experimental artefacts when investigating ventilatory and
cardiac physiological responses to hypoxia.
Keywords: acute isocapnic hypoxic ventilatory response, isocapnic hypoxic
heart rate response, repeatability, variability
1
Present address: S.P.A.C.E. Research Group, Department of Zoology, University of Stellenbosch, Private Bag X1,
Matieland 7602, South Africa.
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