Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 152, No. 1, Jul 1995, 211-216.
Ventilatory response to arm elevation. Its determinants and use in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
SK Epstein, BR Celli, J Williams, S Tarpy, J Roa and T Shannon
Department of Medicine, Boston Veterans Administration Medical Center, Boston University School of Medicine, Massachusetts, USA.
During arm elevation, normal individuals predominantly recruit the
diaphragm, whereas chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients
use more the accessory inspiratory and abdominal expiratory muscles. To
test that arm elevation is useful to study the ventilatory muscle response
in COPD, and to define the factors that determine this response, we studied
34 patients (FEV1 0.95 +/- 0.08 L) during 2 min of arm elevation.
Transnasal balloons were used to determine end- inspiratory and
end-expiratory gastric (Pg), pleural (Ppl) and transdiaphragmatic (Pdi)
pressures. The slope of delta Pg/delta Ppl (= Pgi - Pge/Ppli - Pple) was
used to infer respiratory muscle recruitment. With linear regression, the
delta Pg/delta Ppl during arm elevation significantly correlated with
resting delta Pg/delta Ppl (r = 0.68), hyperinflation (FRC/TLC, r = 0.52),
and diaphragmatic tension time index (TTIdi) (r = 0.47). With multiple
regression, resting delta Pg/delta Ppl, percentage predicted FRC (FRC
%pred) and TTIdi influenced delta Pg/delta Ppl during arm elevation (r =
0.84). Over the 2 min of arm elevation, the dependency upon resting
breathing pattern decreased, while hyperinflation and TTIdi became
increasingly important. Higher resting TTIdi values were associated with a
faster and shallower breathing pattern (f/VT > or = 38) during arm
elevation. We conclude that the pattern of respiratory muscle recruitment
during arm elevation depends primarily on the resting breathing pattern.
Over 2 min, the degree of hyperinflation and the force reserve of the
diaphragm increasingly impact on the ability to recruit the diaphragm.
Measurement of f/VT during arm elevation is useful to determine functional
reserve of the diaphragm in severe COPD.
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Copyright © 1995 American Thoracic Society
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