Abstract
The purpose of the present clinical research was to establish the major site of resistance and obstruction in patients with severe, symptomatic chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. We used a noninvasive technique by measuring airflow in a plethysmograph after patients breathed air and after breathing a mixture of 80 percent helium and 20 percent oxygen. In group 1 were 14 patients (mean age, 63 +/- 7 years [+/- 1 SD]) with bronchitis. The ratio of their forced expiratory volume in one second over the vital capacity (FEV1/VC) was 43 +/- 10 percent (mean +/- 1 SD), and their single-breath carbon monoxide diffusing capacity (Dsb) was normal (125 +/- 41 percent of the predicted value). In group 2 were 13 patients with emphysema (mean age, 60 +/- 10 years), whose FEV1/VC was 33 +/- 11 percent and Dsb was 55 +/- 14 percent of predicted. All patients had abnormally low increases in the maximum expiratory flow at midvital capacity after breathing the helium-oxygen mixture. The range in group 1 was -11 percent to +14 percent and in group 2 was -10 percent to +15 percent. Normal subjects in our laboratory show increases of at least +24 percent. This indicates that the limitation of airflow occurs primarily in the small (less than 2 mm in internal diameter) and not the large airways.
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