Positional Hypoxemia in Unilateral Lung Disease
- 26 February 1981
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 304 (9), 523-525
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm198102263040906
Abstract
BODY position may affect gas exchange by altering the matching of ventilation to perfusion within the lungs.1 2 3 In normal subjects breathing normally, both blood flow and ventilation are greater in the dependent lung zones. When subjects breathe deeply so that lung volume falls below that present at the end of normal expiration, the nondependent lung zones are preferentially ventilated.4 These considerations may assume clinical importance in unilateral lung disease, in which alterations in lung volume and regional perfusion complicate the predictability of the gravitational effects on gas exchange.5 We have encountered positionally related cardiac arrhythmias and dyspnea induced by lying . . .This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Regional distribution of ventilation and perfusion as a function of body position.Journal of Applied Physiology, 1966
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- Distribution of blood flow and ventilation-perfusion ratio in the lung, measured with radioactive CO2Journal of Applied Physiology, 1960
- THE EFFECT OF CHANGE IN BODY POSITION ON LUNG VOLUME AND INTRAPULMONARY GAS MIXING IN NORMAL SUBJECTS 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1955