Abstract

Sixteen patients with mitral valve disease, in whom bronchial hyperresponsiveness to methacholine had been detected shortly before mitral valve replacement (MVR), were reevaluated 35 +/- 1.5 months after MVR. In 9/16 patients there was a significant (greater than 1.5 fold) increase in bronchial provocation dose of methacholine (PD20FEV1) after MVR. In the same patients there was a significant increase in vital capacity (from 69.6 +/- 5 to 75.8 +/- 5.2% of predicted, p less than 0.01), a significant decrease in cardiothoracic ratio and in radiologic score for lung edema (from 64.3 +/- 2.9 to 56 +/- 2.1, p less than 0.01 and from 38 +/- 4.5 to 14.6 +/- 2, p less than 0.001, respectively). In all the patients the increase in PD20FEV1 was not related to any change in spirometric values but it was related to the decrease in cardiothoracic index (r = 0.72, p less than 0.01) and in radiologic score for lung edema (r = 0.61, p less than 0.05) observed after cardiosurgery.

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