Regional expiratory flow limitation studied with Technegas in asthma

Author:

Pellegrino Riccardo1,Biggi Alberto2,Papaleo Alberto2,Camuzzini Gianfranco2,Rodarte Joseph R.3,Brusasco Vito4

Affiliation:

1. Fisiopatologia Respiratoria and

2. Medicina Nucleare, Azienda Ospedaliera S. Croce e Carle, 12110 Cuneo, Italy;

3. Pulmonary and Critical Care Section, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas 77030; and

4. Cattedra di Fisiopatologia Respiratoria, Dipartimento di Scienze Motorie e Riabilitative, Università di Genova, 16132 Genova, Italy

Abstract

Regional expiratory flow limitation (EFL) may occur during tidal breathing without being detected by measurements of flow at the mouth. We tested this hypothesis by using Technegas to reveal sites of EFL. A first study ( study 1) was undertaken to determine whether deposition of Technegas during tidal breathing reveals the occurrence of regional EFL in induced bronchoconstriction. Time-activity curves of Technegas inhaled during 12 tidal breaths were measured in four asthmatic subjects at control conditions and after exposure to inhaled methacholine at a dose sufficient to abolish expiratory flow reserve near functional residual capacity. A second study ( study 2) was conducted in seven asthmatic subjects at control and after three increasing doses of methacholine to compare the pattern of Technegas deposition in the lung with the occurrence of EFL. The latter was assessed at the mouth by comparing tidal with forced expiratory flow or with the flow generated on application of a negative pressure. Study 1 documented enhanced and spotty deposition of Technegas in the central lung regions with increasing radioactivity during tidal expiration. This is consistent with increased impaction of Technegas on the airway wall downstream from the flow-limiting segment. Study 2 showed that both methods based on analysis of flow at the mouth failed to detect EFL at the time spotty deposition of Technegas occurred. We conclude that regional EFL occurs asynchronously across the lung and that methods based on mouth flow measurements are insensitive to it.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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