Abstract

To correlate the degree of alveolar gas compression with the severity of airway obstruction, we plotted separately exhaled and plethysmographic maximal-expiratory-flow-volume (MEFV) curves in each of 4 healthy nonsmokers, 4 asymptomatic smokers, and 4 asymptomatic asthmatics. Spirometry, lung volumes, single breath nitrogen plateau (Phase III), and closing volumes (Phase IV) were normal in the smokers and nonsmokers, and there were either normal or showed evidence of mild airway obstruction in the asthmatics. MEFV curves were plotted by using exhaled flow (VE) against exhaled volume (VE), and by using plethysmographic flow (VL) against plethysmographic volume (VL). These curves were utilized to construct isovolume-pressure-flow (IVPF) curves of esophageal pressure (Pes) against VE and against VL for each subject. Differences in the flow (VL minus VE) were calculated from these curves at 75% vital capacity (VC), 50% VC, and 25% VC at the same Pes in all 3 groups. At 75% VC, the mean flow difference in the asthmatic group was significantly higher than in normals (P less than 0.05); at 50% VC, it was significantly higher both in the asthmatics and the smokers (P less than 0.05); at 25% VC, there was no significant difference among the 3 groups. The mean plethysmographic forced vital capacity (FVC) exceeded exhaled FVC in all 3 groups, but the difference was significantly higher in smokers and asthmatics than in nonsmokers (P less than 0.05). These findings suggest that significant alveolar gas compression may occur at 75% VC in mild asthmatics, whereas in smokers it occurs at the middle portion of the VC.

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