phase iii slope
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2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Jauhar Cardoso Bessa ◽  
Felipe de Miranda Carbonieri Ribeiro ◽  
Geraldo da Rocha Castelar Pinheiro ◽  
Agnaldo José Lopes

Abstract Objective There has been growing interest in studying small airway disease through measures of ventilation distribution, thanks to the resurgence of the nitrogen single-breath washout (N2SBW) test. Therefore, this study evaluated the contribution of the N2SBW test to the detection of pulmonary involvement in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Results Twenty-one patients with RA underwent clinical evaluation, pulmonary function tests (PFTs), including the N2SBW test, and computed tomography (CT). The main tomographic findings were air trapping and bronchiectasis (57.1% and 23.8% of cases, respectively). According to the phase III slope of the N2SBW (phase III slope), 11 and 10 patients had values < 120% predicted and > 120% predicted, respectively. Five patients with limited involvement on CT had a phase III slope > 120%. The residual volume/total lung capacity ratio was significantly different between patients with phase III slopes < 120% and > 120% (P = 0.024). Additionally, rheumatoid factor positivity was higher in patients with a phase III slope > 120% (P = 0.021). In patients with RA and airway disease on CT, the N2SBW test detects inhomogeneity in the ventilation distribution in approximately half of the cases, even in those with normal conventional PFT results.


2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 152-158 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paloma Lopes Francisco Parazzi ◽  
Fernando Augusto Lima Marson ◽  
Jose Dirceu Ribeiro ◽  
Maria Angela Goncalves de Oliveira Ribeiro ◽  
Camila Isabel Santos Schivinski

Author(s):  
Laurie Smith ◽  
Felix Horn ◽  
Helen Marshall ◽  
Guilhem Collier ◽  
Paul Hughes ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Felix Horn ◽  
Guilhem Collier ◽  
Ho-Fung Chan ◽  
Neil Stewart ◽  
Jim Wild

Author(s):  
Toshihiro Shirai ◽  
Kazutaka Mori ◽  
Tomoyoshi Tsuchiya ◽  
Masashi Mikamo ◽  
Takahito Suzuki ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 189 (1) ◽  
pp. 42-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masashi Mikamo ◽  
Toshihiro Shirai ◽  
Kazutaka Mori ◽  
Yuichiro Shishido ◽  
Takefumi Akita ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
F. S. Henry ◽  
C. J. Llapur ◽  
A. Tsuda ◽  
R. S. Tepper

We present a new one-dimensional model of gas transport in the human adult lung. The model comprises asymmetrically branching airways, and heterogeneous interregional ventilation. Our model differs from previous models in that we consider the asymmetry in both the conducting and the acinar airways in detail. Another novelty of our model is that we use simple analytical relationships to produce physiologically realistic models of the conducting and acinar airway trees. With this new model, we investigate the effects of airway asymmetry and heterogeneous interregional ventilation on the phase III slope in multibreath washouts. The model predicts the experimental trend of the increase in the phase III slope with breath number in multibreath washout studies for nitrogen, SF6 and helium. We confirm that asymmetrical branching in the acinus controls the magnitude of the first-breath phase III slope and find that heterogeneous interregional ventilation controls the way in which the slope changes with subsequent breaths. Asymmetry in the conducting airways appears to have little effect on the phase III slope. That the increase in slope appears to be largely controlled by interregional ventilation inhomogeneities should be of interest to those wishing to use multibreath washouts to detect the location of the structural abnormalities within the lung.


2012 ◽  
Vol 112 (6) ◽  
pp. 1073-1081 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher R. Stuart-Andrews ◽  
Vanessa J. Kelly ◽  
Scott A. Sands ◽  
Angela J. Lewis ◽  
Matthew J. Ellis ◽  
...  

We describe a method to determine the phase III slope for the purpose of calculating indexes of ventilation heterogeneity, Sacin and Scond, from the multiple breath nitrogen washout test (MBNW). Our automated method applies a recursive, segmented linear regression technique to each breath of the MBNW test and determines the best point of transition, or breakpoint, between each phase of the washout. A sample set of 50 MBNW tests (controls, asthma, and COPD) was used to establish the conditions in which the phase III slope obtained from the automated technique best matched that obtained by two manual interpreters. We then applied our technique to a test set of 30 subjects (with an even number of subjects in each of the above groups) and compared these results against the manual analysis of a third independent manual interpreter. Indexes of ventilation heterogeneity were determined using both methods and compared. The phase III slopes determined by the automatic technique best matched the manual interpreter when the phase III slope was calculated from the phase II-III transition point plus the addition of 50% of the phase II volume to the end of the expiration. Calculation of the indexes Sacin and Scond showed no overall difference between analysis methods in either Sacin ( P = 0.14) or Scond ( P = 0.59) when the set threshold was applied to our automated analysis. Our analysis method provides an alternate means for rapid quantification of the MBNW test, removing operator dependence without alteration in either Sacin or Scond.


2010 ◽  
Vol 108 (4) ◽  
pp. 821-829 ◽  
Author(s):  
David A. Shelley ◽  
James L. Puckett ◽  
Steven C. George

Nitric oxide (NO) is detectable in exhaled breath and is thought to be a marker of lung inflammation. The multicompartment model of NO exchange in the lungs, which was previously introduced by our laboratory, considers parallel and serial heterogeneity in the proximal and distal regions and can simulate dynamic features of the NO exhalation profile, such as a sloping phase III region. Here, we present a detailed sensitivity analysis of the multicompartment model and then apply the model to a population of children with mild asthma. Latin hypercube sampling demonstrated that ventilation and structural parameters were not significant relative to NO production terms in determining the NO profile, thus reducing the number of free parameters from nine to five. Analysis of exhaled NO profiles at three flows (50, 100, and 200 ml/s) from 20 children (age 7–17 yr) with mild asthma representing a wide range of exhaled NO (4.9 ppb < fractional exhaled NO at 50 ml/s < 120 ppb) demonstrated that 90% of the children had a negative phase III slope. The multicompartment model could simulate the negative phase III slope by increasing the large airway NO flux and/or distal airway/alveolar concentration in the well-ventilated regions. In all subjects, the multicompartment model analysis improved the least-squares fit to the data relative to a single-path two-compartment model. We conclude that features of the NO exhalation profile that are commonly observed in mild asthma are more accurately simulated with the multicompartment model than with the two-compartment model. The negative phase III slope may be due to increased NO production in well-ventilated regions of the lungs.


2009 ◽  
Vol 109 (1) ◽  
pp. 151-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephan H. Böhm ◽  
Stefan Maisch ◽  
Alexandra von Sandersleben ◽  
Oliver Thamm ◽  
Isabel Passoni ◽  
...  

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