Mechanisms of functional loss in patients with chronic lung disease.
Functional loss (often quantified as exercise limitation) is common in patients with chronic lung disease. The factors involved are multiple and many may be present together in a given patient. Ventilatory factors involve an imbalance in load/capacity relationships. Specifically, breathing loads from abnormal respiratory-system mechanics and/or excessive ventilatory demand cannot be handled by respiratory muscles that are dysfunctional or malpositioned. Gas-exchange factors involve impaired ventilation-perfusion relationships that lead to hypoxemia, impaired oxygen delivery, and pulmonary hypertension. Cardiovascular factors involve coexisting intrinsic heart disease, right-ventricular overload from pulmonary vascular abnormalities, and simple deconditioning. Skeletal muscle (both respiratory and limb) factors involve direct inflammatory mediator effects on muscle function, malnutrition, blood-gas abnormalities, compromised oxygen delivery from right-heart dysfunction, electrolyte imbalances, drugs, and comorbid states. Other less well understood factors include excessive dyspnea, impaired motivation, orthopedic issues, and psychiatric issues.
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Related Subject Headings
- Respiratory System
- Respiratory Mechanics
- Respiratory Function Tests
- Pulmonary Gas Exchange
- Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive
- Muscle Weakness
- Humans
- Cardiovascular System
- Cardiac Output
- 3202 Clinical sciences
Citation
Published In
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Respiratory System
- Respiratory Mechanics
- Respiratory Function Tests
- Pulmonary Gas Exchange
- Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive
- Muscle Weakness
- Humans
- Cardiovascular System
- Cardiac Output
- 3202 Clinical sciences