Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 155, No. 6, 06 1997, 1925-1929.
Exercise ability in survivors of severe bronchopulmonary dysplasia
SV Jacob, LC Lands, AL Coates, GM Davis, CF MacNeish, L Hornby, SP Riley and EW Outerbridge
The Division of Respiratory Medicine, McGill University Montreal Children's Hospital-Research Institute, Quebec, Canada.
There is limited information concerning the exercise performance of
long-term survivors of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), and much of what
is available pertains to those with relatively mild disease. The present
study was undertaken to describe exercise responses in patients with a
history of severe BPD, defined as those patients with a clinical and
radiographic diagnosis of BPD who required supplemental oxygen at least
until they were 44 wk postconceptual age and who were discharged home on
oxygen. Fifteen children with a history of severe BPD were matched for
gestational age with 15 children who had previously had respiratory
distress syndrome but who did not develop BPD (Prem). These Prem control
children were subsequently compared with 13 healthy control children born
at term (Control) who were of similar postnatal age. Participants underwent
pulmonary function testing, progressive exercise testing on a cycle
ergometer, and a steady-state exercise test with cardiac output determined
by CO2-rebreathing. Despite the patients with BPD having a lower FEV1 than
those in the Prem group, who had lower values than the Control group (BPD,
64 +/- 21%; Prem, 85 +/- 11%; Control, 95 +/- 8%), the exercise capacity
did not differ between the BPD and the Prem and between the Prem and the
Control groups (BPD, 84 +/- 15%; Prem, 81 +/- 17%; Control, 91 +/- 12%).
However, the BPD patients used a greater percentage of their ventilatory
reserve (VEmax/40 FEV1: BPD, 93 +/- 20%; Prem, 67 +/- 12%; Control, 59 +/-
13%). Of the four patients with BPD who had significant oxygen desaturation
with exercise, three had the lowest values for FEV1. Cardiac output was
appropriate for oxygen consumption in most patients.
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Copyright © 1997 American Thoracic Society
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