Journal of applied physiology
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To develop a simple noninvasive method for detecting tracheal stenosis, tracheal sounds were analyzed using fast-Fourier transform. The subjects were all female and included 5 normal volunteers and 13 patients with tracheal stenosis mostly secondary to thyroid cancer (11 extrathoracic and 2 intrathoracic lesions). Tracheal sounds were recorded during spontaneous breathing and were digitized with an analog-to-digital converter. ⋯ Patients with significant tracheal stenosis demonstrated an increase in the peak spectral power at approximately 1 kHz and in the mean spectral power from 600 to 1,300 Hz in their tracheal sounds. In patients with extrathoracic lesions, the peak and mean spectral powers correlated well with the area of the stenosis as defined by computed tomography scan. In patients with intrathoracic lesions, abnormalities in the pulmonary functions as well as tracheal sound spectra appeared more evident despite milder stenoses.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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The relative importance of laryngeal afferents in the cough reflex in humans is unknown. This study was designed to investigate the importance of superior laryngeal nerve afferents in the cough reflex induced by inhaled nebulized citric acid in awake humans. Nine healthy volunteers had their cough thresholds to inhaled nebulized citric acid measured after superior laryngeal nerve conduction blockade and after a sham nerve block. ⋯ The geometric means of the cough thresholds for the nerve block vs. sham block tests were 16 +/- 13 (SD) and 15 +/- 8% citric acid, respectively. There was no statistically significant difference (Wilcoxon signed-rank test) between the cough thresholds with and without superior laryngeal nerve block (P > 0.05). We conclude that, in the awake human, superior laryngeal nerve afferents do not play a necessary role in initiation of citric acid-induced cough.