Chest
Volume 99, Issue 4, April 1991, Pages 826-830
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Clinical Investigations
Can Concomitant Restriction Be Detected in Adult Men with Airflow Obstruction?

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A reduction in lung volume is used to diagnose physiologic restriction in the pulmonary function tests of patients with lung disease. Airflow obstruction is commonly associated with hyperinflation of static lung volume. Because restriction and obstruction exert opposite effects on lung volumes, we questioned whether the lack of hyperinflation of static lung volumes could indicate the presence of concomitant restriction in patients with airflow obstructive ventilatory defects. To assess this, we evaluated by pulmonary function tests and chest roentgenograms of 58 patients with airflow obstruction (group 1), 18 of whom then sustained various types of resection for lung cancer (group 2) as a type of superimposed restriction. We selected 80 percent of predicted as the lower limit of “normal” frequently used by clinical pulmonary function laboratories. Despite a statistically significant decrease in total lung capacity (p<0.05) for the postpneumonectomy patients, when the static lung volume measurements of the patients with resection were evaluated, no one lung volume showed a consistent reduction sufficient to detect the superimposed restriction in all these patients. Using 80 percent of predicted as “normal,” 61 percent of our patients with airflow obstruction and superimposed restriction would have been missed. We conclude that it is clinically difficult, based on only static lung volume measurements alone, to detect restriction superimposed on the hyperinflation of airflow obstruction unless these lung volumes are reduced to below accepted “normal” limits.

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Material and Methods

The eligible population constituted a total of 58 male patients. All patients had complete pulmonary function studies, including spirometry, lung volume measurements of functional residual capacity (FRC) by helium dilution, single breath carbon monoxide diffusing capacity, and arterial blood gases. Chest roentgenograms were obtained in the postero-anterior and lateral projections within six weeks to three months of their lung function studies. Subsets of this population were defined as follows:

Results

In Table 1 demographics, group 1a (File “obstruction only”) was slightly younger (p<0.05) and heavier than the preoperative group 1b (p<0.05). There were, therefore, slight differences between groups 1 and 2 in age, height, and weight (p<0.05). There were, however, no significant demographic differences between groups 1b (preoperative) and 2 (postoperative), eg, there was no significant weight loss (some lung volume prediction equations use body weight).

In pulmonary function data, there were no

Discussion

Most authors hold that a reduction of static lung volumes, especially TLC, will confirm the diagnosis of restriction in the majority of patients.3, 7, 8 Other authors have shown that TLC is an insensitive measure of restriction in patients with combined restriction and obstruction.1, 2 Because restriction and obstruction exert opposite effects on the TLC, it may not be the best measurement to indicate the presence of both defects in patients with both abnormalities. Miller9 states that “if loss

Acknowledgment

The authors appreciate the secretarial assistance of Mrs. Hume Fulmer in the preparation of this manuscript. We also appreciate the advice of Carlton A. Hornung, Ph.D., M.P.H., on the statistical analyses.

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Cited by (1)

Manuscript received June 21; revision accepted September 4.

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