Abstract

Expiratory flow limitation is a key characteristic in obstructive pulmonary diseases. To study abnormal lung mechanics isolated from heterogeneities of obstructive disease, we measured pulmonary function in healthy adults with expiratory loading. Thirty-seven volunteers (25±5 yr) completed spirometry and body plethysmography under control and threshold expiratory loading of 7, 11 cmH2O, and a subset at 20 cmH2O (n = 11). We analyzed the shape of the flow-volume relationship with rectangular area ratio (RAR; Ma et al., Respir Med 2010). Airway resistance was increased (p<0.0001) with 7 and 11 cmH2O loading vs control (9.20±1.02 and 11.76±1.68 vs. 2.53± 0.80 cmH2O/L/s). RAR was reduced (p = 0.0319) in loading vs control (0.45±0.07 and 0.47±0.09L vs. 0.48±0.08). FEV1 was reduced (p<0.0001) in loading vs control (3.24±0.81 and 3.23±0.80 vs. 4.04±1.05 L). FVC was reduced (p<0.0001) in loading vs control (4.11±1.01 and 4.14±1.03 vs. 5.03±1.34 L). Peak expiratory flow (PEF) was reduced (p<0.0001) in loading vs control (6.03±1.67 and 6.02±1.84 vs. 8.50±2.81 L/s). FEV1/FVC (p<0.0068) was not clinically significant and FRC (p = 0.4) was not different in loading vs control. Supra-physiologic loading at 20 cmH2O did not result in further limitation. Expiratory loading reduced FEV1, FVC, PEF, but there were no clinically meaningful differences in FEV1/FVC, FRC, or RAR. Imposed expiratory loading likely leads to high airway pressures that resist dynamic airway compression. Thus, a concave expiratory flow-volume relationship was consistently absent–a key limitation for model comparison with pulmonary function in COPD. Threshold loading may be a useful strategy to increase work of breathing or induce dynamic hyperinflation.

Highlights

  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma are broadly characterized by airway narrowing, high airway resistance, expiratory flow limitation, and exercise intolerance

  • We examined four primary spirometry variables of forced vital capacity (FVC), FEV1, FEV1/FVC, and Peak expiratory flow (PEF) (n = 37)

  • We examined the effect of external expiratory loading on airway resistance and the flowvolume relationship

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Summary

Introduction

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and asthma are broadly characterized by airway narrowing, high airway resistance, expiratory flow limitation, and exercise intolerance. Expiratory flow limitation in obstructive disease often leads to abnormal lung mechanics such as static and dynamic hyperinflation—powerful drivers of dyspnea [1,2,3]. Patients with COPD suffer from a variety of abnormalities in skeletal muscle [4,5,6], cardiovascular dysfunction [7], physical. Pulmonary function with expiratory loading inactivity [8, 9], and high systemic inflammatory burden [10]. Isolating the effects of expiratory flow limitation on lung mechanics alone is challenging for these and other reasons

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