Exercise and the IC, EELV and Vt/IC ratio

Determining whether a subject has a ventilatory limitation to exercise used to be fairly simple since it was based solely on the maximum minute ventilation (Ve) as a percent of predicted. There has been some mild controversy about how the predicted maximum ventilation is derived (FEV1 x 35, FEV1 x 40 or measured MVV) but these don’t affect the overall approach. Several decades ago however, it was realized that subjects with COPD tended to hyperinflate when their ventilation increased and that this hyperinflation could act to limit their maximum ventilation at levels below that predicted by minute ventilation alone.

The fact that FRC could change during exercise was hypothesized by numerous investigators but the ability to measure FRC under these conditions is technically difficult and this led to somewhat contradictory results. About 25 years ago it was realized that it wasn’t necessary to measure FRC, just the change in FRC and that this could be done with an Inspiratory Capacity (IC) measurement.

The maximum ventilatory capacity for any given individual is generally limited by their maximum flow-volume loop envelope. When a person with normal lungs exercises both their tidal volume and their inspiratory and expiratory flow rates increase.

Exercise_FVL_Normal

Exercise_VT_Normal

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When is it hyperinflation?

I was reviewing a PFT recently and noticed that the FEV1 was severely reduced and that the FRC and RV were both elevated. This is a pattern we associate with obstructive gas trapping but I’ve also been reviewing textbooks on pulmonary function interpretation and have found that there isn’t any kind of a universal definition for this.

Hyperinflation and gas trapping are used somewhat interchangeably but the distinction is that gas trapping causes hyperinflation. Gas trapping occurs to some extent in everybody but usually at lung volumes below FRC. The lung volume at which gas trapping occurs rises with age and with obstructive lung disease. Hyperinflation is usually considered to be an increase in FRC but FRC is a dynamic lung volume and there is a range in the response to increased gas trapping. The normal progression from mild to very severe COPD goes something like this:

FEV1: FVC: FRC: RV: TLC: RV/TLC:
Mild
Moderate ↓↓
Severe ↓↓↓ ↓↓ ↑↑ ↑↑
Very Severe ↓↓↓↓ ↓↓↓ ↑↑ ↑↑↑ ↑↑↑

Gas trapping and hyperinflation have significant consequences for an individual’s exercise capacity and level of dyspnea. It is an important clinical finding but from a PFT point of view when is it clearly present?

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