Abstract

Introduction. Measurement of diffusion in the lung is important in the diagnosis and management of most pulmonary diseases. The analysis of diffusion lung capac-ity (DLCO) in combination with body plethysmography is useful for the interpretation of the causes of pulmo-nary gas exchange disorders. The aim: to determine the leading syndromes of pulmonary gas exchange disorders in patients with pulmonary tuberculosis (PT). Materials and methods. 608 patients (244/364 M/W) with veri-fied PT with smoking history of less than 10 pack/years were examined. Spirometry, body plethysmography, and DLCO were performed by the single-breath breath-hold-ing method. Results. DLCO decrease was detected in the majority of patients with PT (76%): in 94% of patients with massive fibrous-cavernous PT, 79.4% with disseminated PT and more than 60% of patients with infiltrative foci, local cavities, tuberculomas. In patients without ventilation dis-orders (58.4%), DLCO decrease was caused by damage to the alveolar capillary membrane, less often by air trapping (35.1%), other cases were rare. In the obstructive variant, mixed disorders of gas exchange (38.2%) and air trapping (34.1%) were most typical. In the restrictive variant, gas exchange surface reduction (62.5%) and mixed disorders (30%) prevailed. In mixed ventilation disorders, the mixed pulmonary gas exchange disorders were most often de-tected (63.8%) and the gas exchange surface reduction was quite common (36.2%) also. Conclusion. Alveolar cap-illary membrane damage (35.1%) and air trapping (28.1%) were most common in patients with PT. The mixed variant and gas exchange surface reduction were detected less frequently (24.7 and 12.1%, respectively), but these syn-dromes led to the most significant DLCO decrease.

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