The American review of respiratory disease
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · May 1981
Lack of sensitivity of measurements of Vd/Vt at rest and during exercise in detection of hemodynamically significant pulmonary vascular abnormalities in collagen vascular disease.
Wasted ventilation fraction (Vd/Vt) normally declines substantially during exercise in persons without lung disease. Failure of Vd/Vt to decrease during exercise has been reported to be one of the earliest abnormalities in patients with dyspnea caused by pulmonary vaso-occlusive disease, suggesting that measurement of Vd/Vt at rest and during exercise are useful in the diagnosis of pulmonary vascular disorders. ⋯ In contrast to previous reports of no change or an increase in Vd/Vt during exercise in patients with pulmonary vascular disease, we found Vd/Vt to decrease significantly during exercise in 8 of 9 patients in whom mean pulmonary artery pressures were abnormally elevated at rest and/or during exercise. Our findings suggest that normal responses of Vd/Vt to exercise do not exclude hemodynamically significant pulmonary vaso-occlusive disease.
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Am. Rev. Respir. Dis. · May 1981
Pulmonary function and exercise gas exchange in survivors of adult respiratory distress syndrome.
Pulmonary function studies were performed on 13 survivors of adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Six of these 13 patients had a forced vital capacity (FVC) and total lung capacity (TLC) less than 80% of predicted within 2 months of the onset of ARDS. Seven patients followed 6 months or more showed no significant difference between measured and predicted FVC (p = 0.26) or TLC (p = 0.12). ⋯ The ratio of dead space to tidal volume decreased to less than 0.25 when VCO2 exceeded 1.0 L/min. We concluded that lung mechanics return to predicted normal values within 4 to 6 months after ARDS, but abnormalities of pulmonary gas exchange persist. Pulmonary vascular obstruction does not appear to explain persistent abnormalities of gas exchange.