Working Capacity and Cardiopulmonary Function After Extensive Lung Resections

Abstract
Twelve patients were investigated 7–168 months after pneumonectomy. Two of them had also undergone resection of a segment of the remaining lung. The follow-up included studies of working capacity, static and dynamic lung volumes, alveolar gas exchange, diffusing capacity, blood gases and central haemodynamics with right heart catheterization. The working capacity was markedly reduced, limited by dyspnoea in 10/12 patients. The dyspnoea was related to reduced static and dynamic lung volumes (50% of normal). The diffusing capacity of the remaining lung was half of that predicted for two lungs from total haemoglobin and age and the transfer capacity of the lungs for oxygen was loaded to its maximum even at submaximal loads, resulting in a decrease in arterial oxygen tension and saturation and an increase in the alveolo-arterial oxygen tension difference. The central circulation was hypokinetic at submaximal loads and the stroke volume was small. The reduction in working capacity was caused by a number of coacting factors, inactivity, reduced lung function and small stroke volume. It was not possible from the present investigation to single out any of these factors as the main cause of dyspnoea during exercise and thereby the reduced working capacity.