Rib cage vs. abdominal displacement in dogs during forced oscillation to 32 Hz

1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 1472-1478 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. R. Boynton ◽  
G. Glass ◽  
I. D. Frantz ◽  
J. J. Fredberg

Allen et al. (J. Clin. Invest. 76: 620–629, 1985) reported that during oscillatory forcing the base of isolated canine lungs distends preferentially relative to the apex as frequency and tidal volume increase. The tendency toward such nonuniform phasic lung distension might influence phasic displacement of the rib cage (RC) relative to the abdomen (ABD). To test this hypothesis we measured RC and ABD displacement in four anesthetized dogs during forced oscillation. Sinusoidal volume changes were delivered through a tracheostomy at 1–32 Hz and measured by body plethysmography. RC and ABD displacements were measured by inductive plethysmography. During oscillation with air at fixed tidal volumes (10–80 ml) RC, normalized to unity at 1 Hz, increased to 2.06–2.22 at 8 Hz (P less than 0.001) and then decreased to 1.06–1.35 (P less than 0.0025) at 32 Hz. ABD, normalized to unity at 1 Hz, was 1.12–1.16 at 4 Hz (P less than 0.001) and decreased to 0.12–0.14 at 32 Hz (P less than 0.001). Displacement of ABD relative to RC did not increase systematically with increasing tidal volume during sinusoidal forcing at any frequency. Thus we found no discernible influence of nonuniform phasic lung distension on chest wall behavior. We infer that in the dog the nonuniform mechanical behavior of the chest wall dominates the nonuniform (but opposing) mechanical tendency of the lung.

1989 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 350-359 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. M. Barnas ◽  
K. Yoshino ◽  
D. Stamenovic ◽  
Y. Kikuchi ◽  
S. H. Loring ◽  
...  

We measured chest wall "pathway impedances" (ratios of pressure changes to rates of volume displacement at the surface) with esophageal and gastric balloons and inductance plethysmographic belts around the rib cage and abdomen during forced volume oscillations (5% vital capacity, 0.5–4 Hz) at the mouth of five relaxed, seated subjects. Volume displacements of the total chest wall surface, measured by summing the rib cage and abdominal signals, approximated measurements using volume-displacement, body plethysmography over the entire frequency range. Resistance (R) and elastance (E) of the diaphragm-abdomen pathway were several times greater than those of the rib cage pathway, except at the highest frequencies where diaphragm-abdominal E was small. R and E of the diaphragm-abdomen pathway and of the rib cage pathway showed the same frequency dependencies as that of the total chest wall: R decreased markedly as frequency increased, and E (especially in the diaphragm-abdomen) decreased at the highest frequencies. These results suggest that the chest wall can be reasonably modeled, over the frequency range studied, as a system with two major pathways for displacement. Each pathway seems to exhibit behavior that reflects nonlinear, rate-independent dissipation as well as viscoelastic properties. Impedances of these pathways are useful indexes of changes in chest wall mechanical behavior in different situations.


Critical Care ◽  
10.1186/cc841 ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 4 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. P121
Author(s):  
A Aliverti ◽  
R Dellacà ◽  
A Lo Mauro ◽  
E Carlesso ◽  
W Del Frate ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 1438-1442 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. A. Farkas ◽  
M. Estenne ◽  
A. De Troyer

A change from the supine to the head-up posture in anesthetized dogs elicits increased phasic expiratory activation of the rib cage and abdominal expiratory muscles. However, when this postural change is produced over a 4- to 5-s period, there is an initial apnea during which all the muscles are silent. In the present studies, we have taken advantage of this initial silence to determine functional residual capacity (FRC) and measure the subsequent change in end-expiratory lung volume. Eight animals were studied, and in all of them end-expiratory lung volume in the head-up posture decreased relative to FRC [329 +/- 70 (SE) ml]. Because this decrease also represents the increase in lung volume as a result of expiratory muscle relaxation at the end of the expiratory pause, it can be used to determine the expiratory muscle contribution to tidal volume (VT). The average contribution was 62 +/- 6% VT. After denervation of the rib cage expiratory muscles, the reduction in end-expiratory lung volume still amounted to 273 +/- 84 ml (49 +/- 10% VT). Thus, in head-up dogs, about two-thirds of VT result from the action of the expiratory muscles, and most of it (83%) is due to the action of the abdominal rather than the rib cage expiratory muscles.


1995 ◽  
Vol 83 (4) ◽  
pp. 835-843. ◽  
Author(s):  
David O. Warner ◽  
Michael J. Joyner ◽  
Erik L. Ritman

Background The pattern of respiratory muscle use during halothane-induced anesthesia differs markedly among species breathing quietly. In humans, halothane accentuates phasic activity in rib cage and abdominal expiratory muscles, whereas activity in the parasternal intercostal muscles is abolished. In contrast, halothane abolishes phasic expiratory muscle activity during quiet breathing in dogs, but parasternal muscle activity is maintained. Respiratory muscle responses to CO2 rebreathing were measured in halothane-anesthetized dogs to determine if species differences present during quiet breathing persist over a wide range of central respiratory drive. Methods Chronic electromyogram electrodes were implanted in three expiratory agonists (the triangularis sterni, transversus abdominis, and external oblique muscles) and three inspiratory agonists (the parasternal intercostal muscle, costal and crural diaphragm) of six mongrel dogs. After a 1-month recovery period, the dogs were anesthetized in the supine position with halothane. The rebreathing response was determined by Read's method during anesthesia with stable 1 and 2 minimum alveolar end-tidal concentrations of halothane. CO2 concentrations were measured in the rebreathing bag using an infrared analyzer. Chest wall motion was measured by fast three-dimensional computed tomographic scanning. Results Halothane concentration did not significantly affect the slope of the relationship between minute ventilation (VE) and PCO2 (0.34 +/- 0.04 [M +/- SE] and 0.28 +/- 0.05 l.min-1.mmHg-1 during 1 and 2 minimum alveolar concentration anesthesia, respectively). However, 2 minimum alveolar concentration anesthesia did significantly decrease the calculated VE at a PCO2 of 60 mmHg (from 7.4 +/- 1.2 to 4.0 +/- 0.6 l.min-1), indicating a rightward shift in the response relationship. No electromyographic activity was observed in any expiratory muscle before rebreathing. Rebreathing produced electromyographic activity in at least one expiratory muscle in only two dogs. Rebreathing significantly increased electromyographic activity in all inspiratory agonists. Rebreathing significantly increased inspiratory thoracic volume change (delta Vth), with percentage of delta Vth attributed to outward rib cage displacement increasing over the course of rebreathing during 1 minimum alveolar concentration anesthesia (from 33 +/- 6% to 48 +/- 2% of delta Vth). Conclusions Rebreathing did not produce expiratory muscle activation in most dogs, demonstrating that the suppression of expiratory muscle activity observed at rest persists at high levels of ventilatory drive. Other features of the rebreathing response also differed significantly from previous reports in halothane-anesthetized humans, including (1) an increase in the rib cage contribution to tidal volume during the course of rebreathing, (2) recruitment of parasternal intercostal activity by rebreathing, (3) differences in the response of ventilatory timing, and (4) the lack of effect of anesthetic depth on the slope of the ventilatory response. These marked species differences are further evidence that the dog is not a suitable model to study anesthetic effects on the activation of human respiratory muscles.


1984 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. R. Chapman ◽  
A. S. Rebuck

To determine whether the rib cage and abdomen-diaphragm contributions to tidal volume (VT) during CO2 rebreathing are affected by postural change, using respiratory inductive plethysmography, we measured in eight healthy volunteers the compartmental VT responses to progressive hypercapnia in both seated and supine postures. The ventilatory, frequency, and VT responses to CO2 of the total respiratory system were not significantly different between postures. VT responses, corrected for body size, ranged from 1.67 to 3.71% vital capacity (VC) X Torr-1 (mean 2.27) in seated subjects and from 1.08 to 3.79% VC X Torr-1 (mean 2.06), in supine subjects. In both postures, the VT response of the abdominal compartment was nearly uniform among subjects and independent of the total respiratory system VT response (slope = 0.091, r = 0.210 P greater than 0.3 seated; slope = 0.043, r = 0.077, P greater than 0.3 supine), whereas the VT response of the rib cage varied among subjects and was significantly correlated to the total VT response (slope = 0.815, r = 0.84, P less than 0.01, seated; slope = 1.125, r = 0.859, P less than 0.01, supine). Thus high tidal volume responses to CO2 rebreathing are determined largely by recruitment of the rib cage compartment in both seated and supine postures.


1987 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 284-290 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. P. Teeter ◽  
K. P. Strohl ◽  
J. M. Fouke

To describe the mechanical cycles of the upper and lower portions of the respiratory system, we measured volume change in and out of the isolated upper airway in 13 anesthetized dogs and compared volume changes in the upper airway with tidal volume change during spontaneous respiratory efforts. During inspiration the onset and peak increase in volume into the upper airway preceded the onset and peak of inspiratory tidal volume by 84 +/- 8 and 638 +/- 47 ms, respectively. The volume cycle of the upper airway was nearly complete by the end of inspiratory airflow into the thorax. With progressive hypercapnia there was an increase in the change in both upper airway volume and tidal volume but the temporal sequence was preserved. End-expiratory tracheal occlusion increased the volume change in the isolated upper airway at any level of CO2; however, the effect was disproportionately greater at low rather than at high levels of CO2. Following hyperventilation-induced apnea, a change in volume in the upper airway and thorax occurred on the first inspiratory effort. In most animals at lower levels of CO2, the percent change in upper airway volume with inspiration was relatively less than tidal volume, but the reverse was true at higher levels of CO2. These differences represent dissimilarities in the mechanical forces occurring as the result of upper airway and chest wall muscle contraction during inspiration.


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 1605-1614 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Sartene ◽  
P. Martinot-Lagarde ◽  
M. Mathieu ◽  
A. Vincent ◽  
M. Goldman ◽  
...  

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).


2015 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 178-183
Author(s):  
Letícia Silva ◽  
Jacqueline de Melo Barcelar ◽  
Catarina Souza Rattes ◽  
Larissa Bouwman Sayão ◽  
Cyda Albuquerque Reinaux ◽  
...  

The objective of this study was to analyze thoraco-abdominal kinematics in obese children in seated and supine positions during spontaneous quiet breathing. An observational study of pulmonary function and chest wall volume assessed by optoelectronic plethysmography was conducted on 35 children aged 8–12 years that were divided into 2 groups according to weight/height ratio percentiles: there were 18 obese children with percentiles greater than 95 and 17 normal weight children with percentiles of 5–85. Pulmonary function (forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1); forced vital capacity (FVC); and FEV1/FVC ratio), ventilatory pattern, total and compartment chest wall volume variations, and thoraco-abdominal asynchronies were evaluated. Tidal volume was greater in seated position. Pulmonary and abdominal rib cage tidal volume and their percentage contribution to tidal volume were smaller in supine position in both obese and control children, while abdominal tidal volume and its percentage contribution was greater in the supine position only in obese children and not in controls. No statistically significant differences were found between obese and control children and between supine and seated positions regarding thoraco-abdominal asynchronies. We conclude that in obese children thoraco-abdominal kinematics is influenced by supine posture, with an increase of the abdominal and a decreased rib cage contribution to ventilation, suggesting that in this posture areas of hypoventilation can occur in the lung.


1996 ◽  
Vol 81 (4) ◽  
pp. 1528-1534 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheng Yan ◽  
Pawel Sliwinski ◽  
Peter T. Macklem

Yan, Sheng, Pawel Sliwinski, and Peter T. Macklem.Association of chest wall motion and tidal volume responses during CO2 rebreathing. J. Appl. Physiol. 81(4): 1528–1534, 1996.—The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of chest wall configuration at end expiration on tidal volume (Vt) response during CO2 rebreathing. In a group of 11 healthy male subjects, the changes in end-expiratory and end-inspiratory volume of the rib cage (ΔVrc,e and ΔVrc,i, respectively) and abdomen (ΔVab,eand ΔVab,i, respectively) measured by linearized magnetometers were expressed as a function of end-tidal[Formula: see text]([Formula: see text]). The changes in end-expiratory and end-inspiratory volumes of the chest wall (ΔVcw,e and ΔVcw,i, respectively) were calculated as the sum of the respective rib cage and abdominal volumes. The magnetometer coils were placed at the level of the nipples and 1–2 cm above the umbilicus and calibrated during quiet breathing against the Vt measured from a pneumotachograph. The ΔVrc,e/[Formula: see text]slope was quite variable among subjects. It was significantly positive ( P < 0.05) in five subjects, significantly negative in four subjects ( P < 0.05), and not different from zero in the remaining two subjects. The ΔVab,e/[Formula: see text]slope was significantly negative in all subjects ( P < 0.05) with a much smaller intersubject variation, probably suggesting a relatively more uniform recruitment of abdominal expiratory muscles and a variable recruitment of rib cage muscles during CO2rebreathing in different subjects. As a group, the mean ΔVrc,e/[Formula: see text], ΔVab,e/[Formula: see text], and ΔVcw,e/[Formula: see text]slopes were 0.010 ± 0.034, −0.030 ± 0.007, and −0.020 ± 0.032 l / Torr, respectively; only the ΔVab,e/[Formula: see text]slope was significantly different from zero. More interestingly, the individual ΔVt/[Formula: see text]slope was negatively associated with the ΔVrc,e/[Formula: see text]( r = −0.68, P = 0.021) and ΔVcw,e/[Formula: see text]slopes ( r = −0.63, P = 0.037) but was not associated with the ΔVab,e/[Formula: see text]slope ( r = 0.40, P = 0.223). There was no correlation of the ΔVrc,e/[Formula: see text]and ΔVcw,e/[Formula: see text]slopes with age, body size, forced expiratory volume in 1 s, or expiratory time. The group ΔVab,i/[Formula: see text]slope (0.004 ± 0.014 l / Torr) was not significantly different from zero despite the Vt nearly being tripled at the end of CO2 rebreathing. In conclusion, the individual Vtresponse to CO2, although independent of ΔVab,e, is a function of ΔVrc,e to the extent that as the ΔVrc,e/[Formula: see text]slope increases (more positive) among subjects, the Vt response to CO2 decreases. These results may be explained on the basis of the respiratory muscle actions and interactions on the rib cage.


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (4) ◽  
pp. 1409-1414 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. M. Barnas ◽  
K. Yoshino ◽  
J. Fredberg ◽  
Y. Kikuchi ◽  
S. H. Loring ◽  
...  

To understand how bical mechanical chest wall (CW) properties are related to those of the CW as a whole, we measured esophageal and gastric pressures, CW volume changes (measured with a head-out body plethysmograph), and anteroposterior and transverse CW diameter changes (measured with magnetometers attached to the surface) during sinusoidal forcing at the mouth (2.5% vital capacity, 0.5-10 Hz) in four healthy subjects. Total CW resistance decreased sharply as frequency rose to 3-4 Hz and remained relatively constant at higher frequencies. Total CW reactance became less negative with increasing frequency but showed no tendency to change sign. Above 2 Hz, diameters measured at different locations changed asynchronously between and within the rib cage and abdomen. “Local pathway impedances” (ratios of esophageal or gastric pressure to a rate of diameter change) showed frequency dependence similar to that of the total CW less than 3 Hz. Local pathway impedances increased during contraction of respiratory muscles acting on the pathway. We conclude that 1) total CW behavior is mainly a reflection of its individual local properties at less than or equal to 3 Hz, 2) local impedances within the rib cage or within the abdomen can change independently in some situations, and 3) asynchronies that develop within the CW during forcing greater than 3 Hz suggest that two compartments may be insufficient to describe CW properties from impedance measurements.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document