| Literature DB >> 28143620 |
Eef D Telenga1,2, Matthijs Oudkerk3, Peter M A van Ooijen3,4, Rozemarijn Vliegenthart3,4, Nick H T Ten Hacken1,2, Dirkje S Postma1,2, Maarten van den Berge5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To investigate if age, gender and smoking are associated with airway wall thickness (AWT) measured by high resolution computed tomography (HRCT) and if higher AWT is associated with lower levels of pulmonary function in healthy current- and never-smokers with a wide age range.Entities:
Keywords: Age; Airway wall thickness; Computed tomography; Smoking
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28143620 PMCID: PMC5286807 DOI: 10.1186/s12890-017-0363-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pulm Med ISSN: 1471-2466 Impact factor: 3.317
Fig. 1Airway wall thickness analysis. a The airway wall tree as extracted by the software program. The airway highlighted in yellow is stretched to a 2D picture in (b). The grey square corresponds to the purple vertical line in (b). This is a cross sectional image of the airway oriented perpendicular to the local centerline direction and given in more detail in (c). The red line is the outer airway wall perimeter and the yellow line is the inner airway wall perimeter. Airway wall thickness (AWT) and wall area percentage (%AWA) are measured in areas of the continuous red line. Dashed parts of the outer perimeter are interpolated and not used for measurements. The assessed perimeter fraction (APF) is the fraction of the outer perimeter that has a continuous line
Baseline characteristics of the 99 subjects
| Age (years) | 39 | (22 – 54) |
| Males (n, %) | 56 | (57) |
| Current-smokers (n, %) | 51 | (52) |
| Cigarettes/day (n)a | 15 | (3 – 29) |
| Packyears (n)a | 15 | (10 – 20) |
| FEV1 (%predicted) | 105 | (98 – 113) |
| FVC (%predicted) | 113 | (105 – 118) |
| FEV1/FVC (%) | 79 | (76 – 84) |
| FEF25–75 (%predicted) | 83 | (71 – 99) |
| RV/TLC (%predicted) | 86 | (77 – 96) |
| TLCOc/VA (%predicted) | 96 | (88 – 104) |
| R5 (kPa/L/s) | 0.30 | (0.25 – 0.36) |
| R20 (kPa/L/s) | 0.28 | (0.22 – 0.33) |
| R5-20 (kPa/L/s) | 0.02 | (0.00 – 0.05) |
| X5 (kPa/L/s) | −0.07 | (−0.10 – −0.06) |
Values are presented as medians with interquartile ranges unless stated otherwise
FEV forced expiratory volume in 1 s, FVC forced vital capacity, FEF forced expiratory flow between 25 and 75% of FVC, RV/TLC residual volume/total lung capacity, TLCOc diffusion capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide, corrected for hemoglobin level, VA alveolar volume, R5 resistance at 5 Hz, R20 resistance at 20Hz, R5-20 difference between R5 and R20, X5 reactance at 5 Hz, AX reactance area
aonly in current-smokers
Fig. 2Association between AWT Pi10 and age. b = −0.003, p < 0.001; AWT Pi10 = airway wall thickness at an internal perimeter of 10 mm estimated from all measurements
Fig. 3AWT Pi10 in never- and current-smokers. AWT Pi10 = airway wall thickness at an internal perimeter of 10 mm estimated from all measurements
Association between AWT Pi10 and pulmonary function parameters
| AWT Pi10 | ||
|---|---|---|
| b |
| |
| FEV1 (L) | −1.697 | 0.001 |
| FEF25–75 (L/s) | −3.215 | 0.001 |
| FVC (L) | −1.288 | 0.047 |
| FEV1/FVC (%) | −13.358 | 0.018 |
| RV/TLC (%) | 3.202 | 0.468 |
| TLCOc/VA (mmol/min/kPa/L) | 0.431 | 0.029 |
| R5 (kPa/L/s) | 0.363 | <0.001 |
| R20 (kPa/L/s) | 0.288 | <0.001 |
| R5-20 (kPa/L/s) | 0.075 | 0.164 |
| X5 (kPa/L/s) | −0.080 | 0.028 |
Linear regressions with pulmonary function parameters as outcome and airway wall thickness as predictor variable and age, gender, smoking status and height added as covariates
AWT Pi10 airway wall thickness at an internal perimeter of 10 mm estimated from all measurements, FEV forced expiratory volume in 1 s, FVC forced vital capacity, FEF forced expiratory flow between 25 and 75% of FVC, RV/TLC residual volume/total lung capacity, TLCOc diffusion capacity of the lung for carbon monoxide, corrected for hemoglobin level, VA alveolar volume, R5 resistance at 5 Hz, R20 resistance at 20Hz, R5-20 difference between R5 and R20, X5 reactance at 5 Hz