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Millions of people
suffer from the effects of hypocapnia, without even realizing it, when they
go to work, face life challenges, and communicate with others. These effects can be dramatic, disturbing,
disruptive, even terrifying as in the case of panic attack. They are usually misinterpreted by
everyone, including the person overbreathing, friends, family, colleagues,
counselors, and healthcare practitioners.
The effects are usually identified as “unexplained,” or they are
attributed to other “causes,” usually ones consistent with practitioner bias
and professional background. Hypocapnia (carbon
dioxide deficit) as a consequence of overbreathing is commonplace. Based on surveys regarding ambulance calls,
60 percent of the ambulance runs in the larger ABDOMEN: nausea, cramping, and bloatedness; BLOOD: red blood cell rigidity, thrombosis; CHEST: tightness, pressure, pain, sense of confinement; COGNITION: attention deficit, inability to think,
poor memory, learning deficits; CONSCIOUSNESS: dizziness, loss of balance, fainting,
blackout, confusion, disorientation, disconnectedness, hallucinations, traumatic
memories, self-esteem, personality shifts; EMOTION: anxiety, anger, panic, apprehension, worry, crying,
low mood, frustration, performance anxiety, phobia; HEART: palpitations, increased rate, angina symptoms,
arrhythmias, nonspecific pain, ECG abnormalities; MOVEMENT: coordination, reaction time, balance; MUSCLES: tetany, hyperreflexia, spasm, weakness, fatigue, pain; PERFORMANCE: endurance, altitude sickness, eye-hand
coordination, rehearsal, anxiety, muscle fatigue/spasm; PERIPHERAL CHANGES: trembling, twitching, shivering,
sweatiness, coldness, tingling, and numbness; SENSES: blurred vision, dry mouth, sound seems distant,
reduced pain threshold; SLEEP: apnea, difficulty falling asleep; STRESS: tenseness, acute fatigue, chronic fatigue, effort
syndrome weakness, headache, burnout; RESPIRATION: shortness of breath, bronchial
constriction/spasm, increased airway resistance, reduced lung compliance,
asthma symptoms, feelings of suffocation, air hunger VASCULAR: hypertension, migraine, digital artery spasm,
ischemia. Acute effects of
hypocapnia, depending on the person, can trigger symptoms of all kinds,
including virtually all of the symptoms identified with the “effects of
stress.” An example is increased
likelihood of bronchial constriction, increased airway resistance, and
reduced lung compliance, effects which made lead to labored breathing
(difficulty in “getting your breath”) and contribute substantially, both
physically and psychologically (e.g., fear of not getting your breath), to
the likelihood of a breathing-struggle episode, even an asthma attack. Other examples include muscle constriction
in (1) the gut, leading to increased likelihood of spasm, pain, and nausea,
and (2) the vascular system, leading to dramatically reduced oxygen and
glucose supply to the brain, coronary constriction in the heart, vascular
resistance, and possible vasospasm and high blood pressure. What are the principles
that account for these effects? Click
here to learn more: physiological
changes. What are some of the
immediate symptoms of hypocapnia?
Click here to learn more: symptoms and deficits. Copyrighted by Behavioral Physiology Institute, Santa Fe, New Mexico USA |