Abstract

The respiratory magnetometer method of Konno and Mead was used to measure separately the rib cage and the diaphragm-abdomen components of the total respiratory system compliance in 11 subjects with normal respiratory systems. Measurements made in the awake, relaxed state by the method of Heaf and Prime were compared with similar measurements made in the anesthetized, paralyzed state by the supersyringe method. The rib cage component was greater in the paralyzed than the relaxed state in 9 of 11 subjects, but the diaphragm-abdomen component was greater in the relaxed than the paralyzed state in 8 of 11 subjects. We believe that these differences can be explained by respiratory muscle activity in the presumed relaxed state. The fraction of the tidal volume attributable to rib cage displacement compared to abdominal displacement was greater during mechanical ventilation in the paralyzed state than during awake, spontaneous breathing. This can be explained by the different distribution of inflating forces produced by diaphragmatic contraction compared to positive airway and alveolar pressure, in particular by the very different patterns of diaphragmatic displacement in the 2 states.

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