Circulation, Vol 75, 139-145, Copyright © 1987 by American Heart Association
TK Natarajan, RA Wise, M Karam, S Permutt and HN Wagner Jr
While the steady-state effects of positive pleural pressure on the
circulation have been extensively studied, less is known about the
immediate effects of positive intrathoracic pressure on cardiac dynamics.
Therefore, we performed electrocardiographically gated radionuclide
ventriculography with a respiratory gating technique in nine healthy
subjects during quiet breathing and during expiration against a 24 cm H2O
expiratory threshold load. During expiration, respiratory loading caused an
increase in stroke counts by 29.4% (p less than .001) due to an increase in
end-diastolic counts of 26.1% (p less than .001). End-systolic counts also
rose 18.8% (p less than .05). The ejection fraction did not change
significantly. These findings indicate that the increase in left
ventricular stroke volume that occurs during the first 1 or 2 beats of a
loaded expiration is due to an increase in left ventricular filling and not
to augmentation of left ventricular ejection. This immediate increase in
pulmonary venous return may reflect increased distensibility of the left
ventricle due to decreased filling of the right ventricle.
ARTICLES
Immediate effect of expiratory loading on left ventricular stroke volume
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