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Airway Dysfunction in Obesity: Response to Voluntary Restoration of End Expiratory Lung Volume

INTRODUCTION: Abnormality in distal lung function may occur in obesity due to reduction in resting lung volume; however, airway inflammation, vascular congestion and/or concomitant intrinsic airway disease may also be present. The goal of this study is to 1) describe the phenotype of lung function i...

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Autores principales: Oppenheimer, Beno W., Berger, Kenneth I., Segal, Leopoldo N., Stabile, Alexandra, Coles, Katherine D., Parikh, Manish, Goldring, Roberta M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3913722/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24505355
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088015
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author Oppenheimer, Beno W.
Berger, Kenneth I.
Segal, Leopoldo N.
Stabile, Alexandra
Coles, Katherine D.
Parikh, Manish
Goldring, Roberta M.
author_facet Oppenheimer, Beno W.
Berger, Kenneth I.
Segal, Leopoldo N.
Stabile, Alexandra
Coles, Katherine D.
Parikh, Manish
Goldring, Roberta M.
author_sort Oppenheimer, Beno W.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Abnormality in distal lung function may occur in obesity due to reduction in resting lung volume; however, airway inflammation, vascular congestion and/or concomitant intrinsic airway disease may also be present. The goal of this study is to 1) describe the phenotype of lung function in obese subjects utilizing spirometry, plethysmography and oscillometry; and 2) evaluate residual abnormality when the effect of mass loading is removed by voluntary elevation of end expiratory lung volume (EELV) to predicted FRC. METHODS: 100 non-smoking obese subjects without cardio-pulmonary disease and with normal airflow on spirometry underwent impulse oscillometry (IOS) at baseline and at the elevated EELV. RESULTS: FRC and ERV were reduced (44±22, 62±14% predicted) with normal RV/TLC (29±9%). IOS demonstrated elevated resistance at 20 Hz (R(20), 4.65±1.07 cmH(2)O/L/s); however, specific conductance was normal (0.14±0.04). Resistance at 5–20 Hz (R(5−20), 1.86±1.11 cmH(2)O/L/s) and reactance at 5 Hz (X(5), −2.70±1.44 cmH(2)O/L/s) were abnormal. During elevation of EELV, IOS abnormalities reversed to or towards normal. Residual abnormality in R(5−20) was observed in some subjects despite elevation of EELV (1.16±0.8 cmH(2)O/L/s). R(5−20) responded to bronchodilator at baseline but not during elevation of EELV. CONCLUSIONS: This study describes the phenotype of lung dysfunction in obesity as reduction in FRC with airway narrowing, distal respiratory dysfunction and bronchodilator responsiveness. When R(5−20) normalized during voluntary inflation, mass loading was considered the predominant mechanism. In contrast, when residual abnormality in R(5−20) was demonstrable despite return of EELV to predicted FRC, mechanisms for airway dysfunction in addition to mass loading could be invoked.
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spelling pubmed-39137222014-02-06 Airway Dysfunction in Obesity: Response to Voluntary Restoration of End Expiratory Lung Volume Oppenheimer, Beno W. Berger, Kenneth I. Segal, Leopoldo N. Stabile, Alexandra Coles, Katherine D. Parikh, Manish Goldring, Roberta M. PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Abnormality in distal lung function may occur in obesity due to reduction in resting lung volume; however, airway inflammation, vascular congestion and/or concomitant intrinsic airway disease may also be present. The goal of this study is to 1) describe the phenotype of lung function in obese subjects utilizing spirometry, plethysmography and oscillometry; and 2) evaluate residual abnormality when the effect of mass loading is removed by voluntary elevation of end expiratory lung volume (EELV) to predicted FRC. METHODS: 100 non-smoking obese subjects without cardio-pulmonary disease and with normal airflow on spirometry underwent impulse oscillometry (IOS) at baseline and at the elevated EELV. RESULTS: FRC and ERV were reduced (44±22, 62±14% predicted) with normal RV/TLC (29±9%). IOS demonstrated elevated resistance at 20 Hz (R(20), 4.65±1.07 cmH(2)O/L/s); however, specific conductance was normal (0.14±0.04). Resistance at 5–20 Hz (R(5−20), 1.86±1.11 cmH(2)O/L/s) and reactance at 5 Hz (X(5), −2.70±1.44 cmH(2)O/L/s) were abnormal. During elevation of EELV, IOS abnormalities reversed to or towards normal. Residual abnormality in R(5−20) was observed in some subjects despite elevation of EELV (1.16±0.8 cmH(2)O/L/s). R(5−20) responded to bronchodilator at baseline but not during elevation of EELV. CONCLUSIONS: This study describes the phenotype of lung dysfunction in obesity as reduction in FRC with airway narrowing, distal respiratory dysfunction and bronchodilator responsiveness. When R(5−20) normalized during voluntary inflation, mass loading was considered the predominant mechanism. In contrast, when residual abnormality in R(5−20) was demonstrable despite return of EELV to predicted FRC, mechanisms for airway dysfunction in addition to mass loading could be invoked. Public Library of Science 2014-02-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3913722/ /pubmed/24505355 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088015 Text en https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Public Domain declaration, which stipulates that, once placed in the public domain, this work may be freely reproduced, distributed, transmitted, modified, built upon, or otherwise used by anyone for any lawful purpose.
spellingShingle Research Article
Oppenheimer, Beno W.
Berger, Kenneth I.
Segal, Leopoldo N.
Stabile, Alexandra
Coles, Katherine D.
Parikh, Manish
Goldring, Roberta M.
Airway Dysfunction in Obesity: Response to Voluntary Restoration of End Expiratory Lung Volume
title Airway Dysfunction in Obesity: Response to Voluntary Restoration of End Expiratory Lung Volume
title_full Airway Dysfunction in Obesity: Response to Voluntary Restoration of End Expiratory Lung Volume
title_fullStr Airway Dysfunction in Obesity: Response to Voluntary Restoration of End Expiratory Lung Volume
title_full_unstemmed Airway Dysfunction in Obesity: Response to Voluntary Restoration of End Expiratory Lung Volume
title_short Airway Dysfunction in Obesity: Response to Voluntary Restoration of End Expiratory Lung Volume
title_sort airway dysfunction in obesity: response to voluntary restoration of end expiratory lung volume
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3913722/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24505355
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088015
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