Persistent breathing patterns may represent adaptive responses to ongoing organizational demands rather than respiratory defects, suggesting durable change requires altering broader systemic conditions.
Abstract Persistent breathing patterns are frequently interpreted as respiratory dysfunctions requiring correction through breathing-centered intervention. This assumption underlies a growing range of approaches in rehabilitation, chronic pain management, autonomic regulation, performance training, and behavioral medicine. Despite substantial variation in method, these approaches often share a common premise: if breathing changes, broader physiological organization will improve. This paper proposes an alternative interpretation. Rather than viewing persistent breathing patterns primarily as defects of the respiratory system, the present hypothesis suggests that many such patterns may represent adaptive responses to ongoing organizational demands operating at the level of the organism as a whole. Within this framework, respiration is conceptualized as a highly flexible regulatory interface capable of participating in mechanical organization, stabilization, energetic allocation, uncertainty management, and physiological coherence. Persistent breathing patterns may therefore remain stable not because the respiratory system lacks plasticity, but because the conditions that originally recruited those patterns remain present. The paper proposes that respiratory persistence may often reflect organizational necessity rather than respiratory failure. If correct, durable respiratory change may depend less on modifying breathing itself and more on altering the broader conditions that continue to make particular breathing strategies useful.
Israel Don (Fri,) conducted a other in Persistent breathing patterns. Persistent breathing patterns may represent adaptive responses to ongoing organizational demands rather than respiratory defects, suggesting durable change requires altering broader systemic conditions.