Quantitating exercise ventilatory and gas exchange dynamics affords insights into physiological control processes and cardiopulmonary dysfunction. We designed a novel waveform, the chirp waveform, to efficiently extract moderate-intensity exercise response dynamics. In the chirp waveform, work rate fluctuates sinusoidally with constant amplitude as sinusoidal period decreases progressively from ∼8.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To examine the feasibility of screening for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in an outpatient cardiac rehabilitation (CR) setting and to evaluate the detection rate of COPD using a targeted screening protocol.
Methods: A total of 95 patients (62.5 ± 10.
This review provides a pulmonary-focused description of the age-associated changes in the integrative physiology of exercise, including how declining lung function plays a role in promoting multimorbidity in the elderly through limitation of physical function. We outline the ageing of physiological systems supporting endurance activity: 1) coupling of muscle metabolism to mechanical power output; 2) gas transport between muscle capillary and mitochondria; 3) matching of muscle blood flow to its requirement; 4) oxygen and carbon dioxide carrying capacity of the blood; 5) cardiac output; 6) pulmonary vascular function; 7) pulmonary oxygen transport; 8) control of ventilation; and 9) pulmonary mechanics and respiratory muscle function. Deterioration in function occurs in many of these systems in healthy ageing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFResearch during the past two decades has demonstrated an important role of the vestibular system in topographical orientation and memory and the network of neural structures associated with them. Almost all of the supporting data have come from animal or human clinical studies, however. The purpose of the present study was to investigate the link between vestibular function and topographical memory in normal elderly humans.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground And Objective: In this era of increasing options for treatment of 'surgical' lung cancer patients, preoperative physiologic assessment of accurate patient selection is becoming more important. The variability in an objective measure of cardiorespiratory fitness (peak oxygen consumption (VO2peak )) across performance in operable non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients enrolled in the Cancer and Leukemia Group B trial was compared.
Methods: Using a cross-sectional design, 392 NSCLC patients underwent an incremental cardiopulmonary cycling exercise test to symptom limitation with expired gas analysis to determine VO2peak .
Dead space to tidal volume ratio (V(D)/V(T)), a measure of pulmonary gas exchange efficiency, cannot be accurately calculated without arterial blood sampling. We sought to determine, in patients presenting for diagnostic cardiopulmonary exercise tests, whether there are ranges of the ratio of exhaled ventilation to carbon dioxide output (V(E)/VCO(2)) measured at the lactate threshold that are highly predictive of normality or abnormality of exercise V(D)/V(T) (below or above 0.3) and whether other demographic or physiologic variables aid in this prediction.
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