Abstract

Ventilation-perfusion relationships were studied in patients with non-alcoholic liver cirrhosis. Spirometry was essentially normal but the transfer factor of the lung (DLCO) was reduced by an average 34% of predicted. Arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) ranged from normal down to 6.9 kPa. Varying degrees of ventilation-perfusion (VA/Q) abnormalities (multiple inert gas elimination technique) were observed with increased dispersion of the perfusion distribution (log SDQ, 0.90; range 0.32-1.71; upper normal limit, 0.60) and the presence of both regions of low VA/Q ratios (between 0.1 and 0.005) (mean 4.1%; range 0-18.8%) and shunt (VA/Q ratios below 0.005) (mean 3.9%; range 0.19.8%). There was a close similarity between measured and calculated PaO2 in normoxaemic patients, but calculated values exceeded measured PaO2 in hypoxaemic patients. The difference between calculated and measured PaO2 correlated inversely to DLCO (r = 0.65, p less than 0.05). An inverse correlation was also noted between DLCO and the sum of shunt and low VA/Q regions (r = 0.87, p less than 0.001). It is concluded that hypoxaemia in non-alcoholic liver cirrhosis patients can be accounted for by intrapulmonary shunting and VA/Q mismatch, and possibly a "diffusion-perfusion" defect in patients with more severe gas exchange impairment.

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