Respiratory medicine
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Respiratory medicine · Feb 1999
Sleep quality, carbon dioxide responsiveness and hypoxaemic patterns in nocturnal hypoxaemia due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) without daytime hypoxaemia.
In order to clarify whether nocturnal hypoxaemia (arterial oxygen saturation, SaO2 < 90%) may exist in the long-term before daytime hypoxaemia (PaO2 < 8.0 kPa) occurs in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), 21 patients with stable severe COPD without daytime hypoxaemia (PaO2 > or = 8.0 kPa) were studied prospectively. Subjects were monitored twice by polysomnography (PSG) 12 months apart. Spirometry was performed, and diffusion capacity (DLCO) and hypercapnic respiratory drive response delta PI0.1 delta PCO2(-1)) were measured during the daytime in conjunction with polysomnography. ⋯ Prolonged nocturnal hypoxaemia and reduced whole night oxygenation are associated with increased superficial sleep. Sleep fragmentation and high carbon dioxide sensitivity may be important defence mechanisms against sleep-related hypoxaemia. The appearance of daytime hypoxaemia is preceded by a substantial deterioration in lung function, but by only a minor deterioration of nocturnal hypoxaemia.
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Respiratory medicine · Feb 1999
Agreement between spirometry and tracheal auscultation in assessing bronchial responsiveness in asthmatic children.
We have recently found that changes in lung sounds correspond well with a 20% fall in the forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) after methacholine challenge in asthmatic children. Up to now, little was known about the agreement between a 20% fall in FEV1 and a change in lung sounds after repeated bronchial challenge. In this study we investigated the agreement between the total cumulative histamine dose causing a fall in FEV1 of 20% or more (PD20) and the detection of a change in lung sounds (PDlung sounds) after two bronchial challenges on different occasions in asthmatic children. ⋯ Good agreement between the logarithm of PD20 and the logarithm of PDlung sounds was found on both test days. The mean difference was 0.04 and the limits of agreement (d +/- 2 SD of the differences) were 0.04 +/- 0.41. A good agreement was found between the total cumulative histamine dose causing a fall in FEV1 of 20% or more and the detection of a change in lung sounds after two bronchial challenges on different occasions in asthmatic children.