Literature DB >> 6467840

Differences in the effect of mediastinal radiotherapy on lung function and the ventilatory response to exercise.

P W Jones, A Al-Hillawi, J M Wakefield, N M Johnson, A M Jelliffe.   

Abstract

To examine the effect of lung inflammation on lung volumes and carbon monoxide transfer and their relationship to the ventilatory and gas exchange responses to exercise, a prospective study was performed in patients having Hodgkin's disease, with no evidence of intrathoracic involvement, who received prophylactic mantle-field radiotherapy to the chest. From 6 weeks to 6 months from the start of therapy, vital capacity (FVC) was on average 10.4% lower than during the baseline period and the total transfer of carbon monoxide (TLCO) was 10.5% lower. Minute ventilation (VE) at any given work load during an incremental exercise test was on average 10.5% higher than baseline. The stimulation of ventilation after radiotherapy was present at all work rates, but greater at high work rates. A number of other changes in the ventilatory and gas exchange responses to exercise were also seen. Most of these lay outside the range of variability observed in a group of normal subjects tested concurrently with the patients. There was a poor, but statistically significant, positive correlation between reduction in FVC and increase in VE after radiotherapy and between reduction in carbon monoxide transfer and increase in VE. A significant correlation between reduction in FVC and change in respiratory rate was also seen after radiotherapy, together with a significant inverse correlation between increase in respiratory rate and fall in tidal volume. The ratio of VE to oxygen consumption, the ventilatory equivalent for oxygen, was calculated at each work rate. There was a negative correlation between the mean increase in this parameter, averaged over all work rates, and the reduction in FVC and TLCO, i.e. the greatest stimulation of breathing relative to metabolic demand occurred in those patients with the least change in lung volume.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6467840     DOI: 10.1042/cs0670389

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Sci (Lond)        ISSN: 0143-5221            Impact factor:   6.124


  1 in total

1.  A simple and portable paced step test for reproducible measurements of ventilation and oxygen consumption during exercise.

Authors:  P W Jones; J M Wakefield; E Kontaki
Journal:  Thorax       Date:  1987-02       Impact factor: 9.139

  1 in total

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