Flow limitation and dynamic hyperinflation: key concepts in modern respiratory physiology

被引:155
作者
Calverley, PMA
Koulouris, NG [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Athens, Sotiria Hosp, Sch Med, Dept Resp Med,Resp Funct Lab, Athens, Greece
[2] Univ Liverpool, Aintree Hosp, Ctr Clin Sci, Liverpool L69 3BX, Merseyside, England
关键词
asthma; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; exercise; flow limitation; hyperinflation; physiological concepts;
D O I
10.1183/09031936.04.00113204
中图分类号
R56 [呼吸系及胸部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
Fashions in ideas, like clothes, come and go. From approximately 1950-1980, physiological research was seen as the key discipline in understanding lung disease and was at the cutting edge of pulmonary science. Subsequently, its importance has been down played amid a widely accepted but unfounded assumption that we now have a perfect working understanding of the physiological behaviour of the respiratory system in health and disease. Although it seems improbable that completely new disciplines within respiratory physiology will emerge with fundamentally different ways of describing the mechanical or gas exchanging function of the lung, advances in computing and new observations in disease have highlighted previously unsuspected physiological abnormalities that have changed the way we view lung disease and the interface between disordered lung mechanics, symptomatology and disability. This is especially true for the two related physiological concepts of expiratory flow limitation and dynamic hyperinflation, which are now being taken from the physiological laboratory to the bedside with dramatic effect. Each arises from well-established theoretical and practical observations first made 40 yrs ago and now adapted to a range of settings, particularly in the field of obstructive lung disease. This review focuses on how these conditions are defined and assessed and what evidence there is that they might be important in lung disease.
引用
收藏
页码:186 / 199
页数:14
相关论文
共 105 条
  • [1] Regional chest wall volumes during exercise in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
    Aliverti, A
    Stevenson, N
    Dellacà, RL
    Lo Mauro, A
    Pedotti, A
    Calverley, PMA
    [J]. THORAX, 2004, 59 (03) : 210 - 216
  • [2] Human respiratory muscle actions and control during exercise
    Aliverti, A
    Cala, SJ
    Duranti, R
    Ferrigno, G
    Kenyon, CM
    Pedotti, A
    Scano, G
    Sliwinski, P
    Macklem, PT
    Yan, S
    [J]. JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1997, 83 (04) : 1256 - 1269
  • [3] Time course of expiratory flow limitation in COPD patients during acute respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation
    Alvisi, V
    Romanello, A
    Badet, M
    Gaillard, S
    Philit, F
    Guérin, C
    [J]. CHEST, 2003, 123 (05) : 1625 - 1632
  • [4] Intrinsic positive end-expiratory pressure in mechanically ventilated patients with and without tidal expiratory flow limitation
    Armaganidis, A
    Stavrakaki-Kallergi, K
    Koutsoukou, A
    Lymberis, A
    Milic-Emili, J
    Roussos, C
    [J]. CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 2000, 28 (12) : 3837 - 3842
  • [5] Extrathoracic expiratory flow limitation in obesity and obstructive and restrictive disorders - Effects of increasing negative expiratory pressure
    Baydur, A
    Wilkinson, L
    Mehdian, R
    Bains, B
    Milic-Emili, J
    [J]. CHEST, 2004, 125 (01) : 98 - 105
  • [6] Expiratory flow limitation during spontaneous breathing - Comparison of patients with restrictive and obstructive respiratory disorders
    Baydur, A
    MilicEmili, J
    [J]. CHEST, 1997, 112 (04) : 1017 - 1023
  • [7] BRONCHOCONSTRICTION OCCURRING DURING EXERCISE IN ASTHMATIC SUBJECTS
    BECK, KC
    OFFORD, KP
    SCANLON, PD
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 1994, 149 (02) : 352 - 357
  • [8] Inhaled bronchodilators reduce dynamic hyperinflation during exercise in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
    Belman, MJ
    Botnick, WC
    Shin, JW
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 1996, 153 (03) : 967 - 975
  • [9] Chest wall kinematics and breathlessness during pursed-lip breathing in patients with COPD
    Bianchi, R
    Gigliotti, F
    Rontagnoli, I
    Lanini, B
    Castellani, C
    Grazzini, M
    Scano, G
    [J]. CHEST, 2004, 125 (02) : 459 - 465
  • [10] Expiratory flow limitation in stable asthmatic patients during resting breathing
    Boczkowski, J
    Murciano, D
    Pichot, MH
    Ferretti, A
    Pariente, R
    MilicEmili, J
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF RESPIRATORY AND CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE, 1997, 156 (03) : 752 - 757