Publication | Closed Access
Pulmonary function in acute cervical cord injury.
171
Citations
16
References
1981
Year
Acute Lung InjurySpinal Cord InjuryPulmonary CirculationClinical InjuryPulmonary FunctionSpinal TraumaVital CapacityPulmonary PhysiologySepsisLung MechanicsSpinal InjuryMedicineEmergency MedicineCervical Spine
Measurements of pulmonary function were made on patients within 1 wk, 3 wk, 5 wk, 3 months, and 5 months of spinal cord injury. In patients with functionally complete transection of the cord between segment C5 and C6, the vital capacity was 30% of predicted in the first week after injury. Patients with injuries at C4 had smaller vital capacities. A significant increase in vital capacity occurred within 5 wk of injury with an approximate doubling of vital capacity 3 months after injury. Expiratory flow rates were directly dependent upon vital capacity. There was a high incidence of arterial hypoxemia, in the acute stage, even in patients with adequate ventilatory ability and normocarbia.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1