Literature DB >> 2347799

Respiratory cross-sectional area-flux measurements of the human chest wall.

R Sartene1, P Martinot-Lagarde, M Mathieu, A Vincent, M Goldman, G Durand.   

Abstract

A new device that utilizes the voltages induced in separate coils encircling the rib cage and abdomen by a magnetic field is described for measurement of cross-sectional areas of the human chest wall (rib cage and abdomen) and their variation during breathing. A uniform magnetic field (1.4 X 10(-7) Tesla at 100 kHz) is produced by generating an alternating current at 100 kHz in two square coils, 1.98 m on each side, parallel to the planes of the areas to be measured and placed symmetrically cephalad and caudad to these planes at a mean distance of 0.53 m. We demonstrated that the accuracy of the device on well-defined surfaces (squares, circles, rectangles, ellipses) was within 1% in all cases. Observed errors are due primarily to small inhomogeneities of the magnetic field and variation of the orientation of the coil relative to the field. Using a second magnetic field (80 kHz) perpendicular to the first, we measured the errors due to nonparallel orientation during quiet breathing and inspiratory capacity maneuvers. In 10 normal subjects, orientation effects were less than 2% for the rib cage and less than 0.7% for the abdomen. In five of these subjects, orientation effects at functional residual capacity in lateral and seated postures were generally less than or equal to 5%, but estimated tidal volume during spontaneous breathing was comparable to measurements in the supine posture. In five curarized patients, we assessed the linearity of volume-motion relationships of the rib cage and abdomen, comparing cross-sectional area and circumference measurements. Departures from linearity using cross-sectional areas were only one-third of those using circumferences. In seven normal subjects we compared cross-sectional area measurements with respiratory inductive plethysmography (RIP) and found comparable estimates of lung volume change over a wide range of relative rib cage contributions to tidal volume (-5 to 105%), with slightly higher standard deviations for the RIP (SD = 10% for RIP; SD = 4% for cross-sectional area).

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2347799     DOI: 10.1152/jappl.1990.68.4.1605

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Physiol (1985)        ISSN: 0161-7567


  2 in total

1.  Kinetics of action of salbutamol inhaled from a metered dose inhaler (MDI) and a "Diskhaler".

Authors:  M Mathieu; M Goldman; N Lellouche; R Sartene
Journal:  Eur J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  1992       Impact factor: 2.953

2.  Thoracoabdominal asynchrony: Two methods in healthy, COPD, and interstitial lung disease patients.

Authors:  Mayra Caleffi Pereira; Desiderio Cano Porras; Adriana Claudia Lunardi; Cibele Cristine Berto Marques da Silva; Renata Cléia Claudino Barbosa; Letícia Zumpano Cardenas; Renata Pletsch; Jeferson George Ferreira; Isac de Castro; Celso Ricardo Fernandes de Carvalho; Pedro Caruso; Carlos Roberto Ribeiro de Carvalho; André Luis Pereira de Albuquerque
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-08-02       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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