Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med.,
Volume 158, Number 2, August 1998, 452-457
Neck and Abdominal Muscle Activity in Patients with
Severe Thoracic Scoliosis
MARC
ESTENNE,
ERIC
DEROM,
and
ANDRÉ
DE TROYER
Chest Service, Erasme University Hospital, and Laboratory of Cardiorespiratory Physiology, Brussels School of Medicine, Brussels;
and Department of Respiratory Diseases, University Hospital, Gent, Belgium
Patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) do not use the sternocleidomastoid muscles when breathing at rest, but have a greater than normal neural drive to the rib-cage inspiratory muscles, the abdominal muscles, and the diaphragm. Yet the increased activation of the abdominal muscles and diaphragm in such patients has only limited mechanical effects, and this has led
to the suggestion that the overall increase in neural drive is simply an automatic response of the respiratory system to a greater than resting stimulation. To test this hypothesis, we examined the pattern of respiratory-muscle activation in eight patients with severe thoracic scoliosis (Cobb angle
between 100° and 136°). We recorded electromyograms of the sternocleidomastoid, scalene, rectus
abdominis, external oblique, and transversus abdominis muscles; esophageal (Pes) and gastric (Pga)
pressures; and the anteroposterior (AP) diameter of the abdomen during resting breathing in the
seated posture. All patients had invariable phasic inspiratory activity in the scalenes; and five patients
had invariable phasic expiratory activity in the transversus; intermittent expiratory activity in the
transversus was also recorded in three patients. In contrast, only one patient had invariable phasic inspiratory activity in the sternocleidomastoid, and only one patient had invariable phasic expiratory
activity in the external oblique. The decrease in abdominal AP diameter during expiration was commonly associated with a rise in Pga. These observations therefore indicate that the pattern of respiratory-muscle activation in patients with severe thoracic scoliosis is essentially similar to that seen in patients with severe COPD. This supports the concept that the order of recruitment of the respiratory
muscles during breathing is an automatic response of the central controller.
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Copyright © 1998 American Thoracic Society
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