Assessment of respiratory muscle strength in bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis
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Abstract
Measurement of respiratory muscle strength is useful in order to detect respiratory muscle weakness and to quantify its severity. Apropos of a patient with bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis, we review the clinical manifestations and methods for assessing the strength of the respiratory muscles. In patients with severe respiratory muscle weakness, vital capacity and total lung capacity are reduced but are a non-specific and relatively insensitive measure. Conventionally, inspiratory and expiratory muscle strength has been assessed by maximal inspiratory and expiratory mouth pressures sustained for one second (PIMax and PEMax). The sniffmanoeuvre is natural and probably easier to perform. Sniff pressures are more reproducible and useful measure of diaphragmatic strength. However, the PIMax-PEMax and sniff manoeuvres are volition dependent, and submaximal efforts are most likely to occur in patients who are ill or breathless. Non-volitional tests include measurements of twitch esophageal, gastric and transdiaphragmatic pressure during bilateral electrical and magnetic phrenic nerve stimulation. Electrical phrenic nerve stimulation is technically difficult and is also uncomfortable and painful. Magnetic phrenic nerve stimulation is less painful and transdiaphragmatic pressure is reproducible in normal subjects. Systematic clinical evaluation and additional laboratory tests allow the diagnosis in most patients with respiratory muscle weakness.
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Keywords.
Respiratory muscle strength, diaphragmatic function, diaphragm paralysis, lung volumes, phrenic nerve stimulation
Section
CLINICAL CASE REPORT
How to Cite
BRICEÑO V, C., REYES B, T., SÁEZ B, J., & SALDÍAS P, F. (2014). Assessment of respiratory muscle strength in bilateral diaphragmatic paralysis. Revista Chilena De Enfermedades Respiratorias, 30(3), 166–171. Retrieved from https://www.revchilenfermrespir.cl/index.php/RChER/article/view/325