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The hyperventilation syndrome

The hyperventilation syndrome is the name given to a distinctive group of symptoms and signs which are caused by an increase in the depth and rate of breathing. This abnormal breathing is nearly always the result of emotional stress. The association between emotional stress and disorders of breathin...

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Main Author: Ames, Frances
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Public Health and Family Medicine 2020
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access_status_str Open Access
author Ames, Frances
author_browse Ames, Frances
author_facet Ames, Frances
author_sort Ames, Frances
collection Thesis
description The hyperventilation syndrome is the name given to a distinctive group of symptoms and signs which are caused by an increase in the depth and rate of breathing. This abnormal breathing is nearly always the result of emotional stress. The association between emotional stress and disorders of breathing is well-known: sighing with grief, gasping with rage, panting with fear, heaving with resentment. Of its origin, Darwin said, "Men, during numberless generations, have endeavoured to escape from their enemies by headlong flight, or by violently struggling with them; and such great exertions will have caused the heart to beat rapidly, the breathing to be hurried, the chest to heave and the nostrils to be dilated...And, now, whenever the emotion of fear is strongly felt, though it may not lead to any exertion, the same results tend to reappear through the force of inheritance and association." Cannon (1920) described hyperventilation as a preparation for flight or fight: "The forced respirations in deeply emotional experiences can be interpreted, therefore, as an anticipatory reduction of the carbon- dioxide in the blood, a preparation for the augmented discharge of carbon- dioxide into the blood as soon as great muscular exertion begins." Primitive man could and did take to his heels or use his fists if afraid. Modern man, inhibited by cultural and social traditions of behaviour, is unable to do so. So the age-old physiological preparation for flight or fight is not carried over into any functional motor activity. This is when trouble arises. A strong emotional reaction with no motor outlet turns on itself to cause physical upset . In this paper a study is made of the symptoms and signs by which to recognize this syndrome, and of some of the physiological mechanisms which are brought into operation.
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31873 The hyperventilation syndrome Ames, Frances The hyperventilation syndrome is the name given to a distinctive group of symptoms and signs which are caused by an increase in the depth and rate of breathing. This abnormal breathing is nearly always the result of emotional stress. The association between emotional stress and disorders of breathing is well-known: sighing with grief, gasping with rage, panting with fear, heaving with resentment. Of its origin, Darwin said, "Men, during numberless generations, have endeavoured to escape from their enemies by headlong flight, or by violently struggling with them; and such great exertions will have caused the heart to beat rapidly, the breathing to be hurried, the chest to heave and the nostrils to be dilated...And, now, whenever the emotion of fear is strongly felt, though it may not lead to any exertion, the same results tend to reappear through the force of inheritance and association." Cannon (1920) described hyperventilation as a preparation for flight or fight: "The forced respirations in deeply emotional experiences can be interpreted, therefore, as an anticipatory reduction of the carbon- dioxide in the blood, a preparation for the augmented discharge of carbon- dioxide into the blood as soon as great muscular exertion begins." Primitive man could and did take to his heels or use his fists if afraid. Modern man, inhibited by cultural and social traditions of behaviour, is unable to do so. So the age-old physiological preparation for flight or fight is not carried over into any functional motor activity. This is when trouble arises. A strong emotional reaction with no motor outlet turns on itself to cause physical upset . In this paper a study is made of the symptoms and signs by which to recognize this syndrome, and of some of the physiological mechanisms which are brought into operation. 2020-05-14T10:51:26Z 2020-05-14T10:51:26Z 1954 2020-04-23T08:12:56Z Master Thesis Masters https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31873 eng application/pdf Department of Public Health and Family Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Ames, Frances
The hyperventilation syndrome
thesis_degree_str Master's
title The hyperventilation syndrome
title_full The hyperventilation syndrome
title_fullStr The hyperventilation syndrome
title_full_unstemmed The hyperventilation syndrome
title_short The hyperventilation syndrome
title_sort hyperventilation syndrome
url https://hdl.handle.net/11427/31873
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