Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Peripheral muscle weakness contributes to exercise limitation in COPD.

1K

Citations

25

References

1996

Year

Abstract

Recently, it was suggested that fatigue of peripheral muscles could contribute to exercise limitation in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). In order to quantify the role of peripheral muscle force, we restudied potential determinants of exercise capacity (6-min walking distance [6 MWD] and maximal oxygen consumption [V02max]) in 41 consecutive COPD patients (FEV1, 43 +/- 19% of predicted, TLCO, 56 +/- 25% of predicted) admitted to our pulmonary rehabilitation program. VO2max (incremental cycle ergometer test), 6 MWD (best of three), lung function (FEV1, FVC, TLC, FRC), diffusing capacity (TLCO), isometric quadriceps force (QF), hand grip force (HF), and maximal inspiratory (PImax) and expiratory (PEmax) pressures were measured. Patients had a poor 6 MWD (372 +/- 136 m) and VO2max (1.35 +/- 0.60 L, 71%), reduced respiratory (PImax 65 +/- 27%) and peripheral muscle force (QF 74 +/- 27%, HF 82 +/- 23%). In single regression analysis, significant correlations (r) were found for VO2max and TLCO (0.68), FEV1 (0.64), QF (0.55), HF (0.53), and body weight (0.49). Walking distance was significantly correlated with QF (0.63), HF (0.61), PImax (0.49), and TLCO (0.38). In stepwise multiple regression analysis, the variables significantly contributing to 6 MWD were QF and Plmax. For VO2max, variables significantly contributing were TLCO, QF, and FEV1. We conclude that lung function and peripheral muscle force are important determinants of exercise capacity in COPD.

References

YearCitations

1985

2.2K

1969

1.9K

1991

906

1984

811

1985

718

1992

537

1988

377

1992

339

1991

309

1989

227

Page 1