Beer and the respiratory muscles: the adverse effects of ascites.

نویسنده

  • Erik van Lunteren
چکیده

THE ACQUISITION of a beer belly is the fate of many a physiologist. Fortunately, far fewer of us pursue beer drinking to the point of liver failure and the development of ascites. Ascites is defined as the presence of excess protein-containing fluid in the peritoneal cavity, which can range in amount from 100 ml up to as much as 25 liters. The most common cause is alcoholic cirrhosis, but ascites can result from many other conditions, including liver failure of other etiologies (such as viral hepatitis), cardiac disease (in particular heart failure and constrictive pericarditis), hypoalbuminemic states (including nephrotic syndrome and chronic malnutrition), various malignancies (such as ovarian and primary liver cancer), end-stage renal failure, and pancreatitis. Peritoneal dialysis is another setting in which excess fluid is found in the peritoneal space, although the amount of dialysate used per cycle (1–3 liters) is at the low end of the amount that can be found with ascites caused by disease. The cardinal respiratory symptoms experienced by humans with ascites are dyspnea and exercise limitation. Pulmonary function testing reveals particularly reduced lung volumes, including vital capacity and total lung capacity (2, 3). In addition there may be changes in diaphragm length, radius of curvature. and strength (5, 10). Large-volume paracentesis or diuresis reduces the load on the respiratory muscles, augments lung volumes, alters diaphragm curvature, shortens abdominal muscle length, and reduces the magnitude of diaphragm force needed to maintain ventilation (2–5). Human work on respiratory muscle consequences of ascites or peritoneal dialysis has usually been conducted over a small range of changes in peritoneal fluid volume, whereas it is subjects with large amounts of ascites who have the greatest amount of dyspnea and the largest reductions in lung volumes. Animal models have been used previously to study ascites and the respiratory system. Hubmayr et al. (6) infused 60–100 ml/kg body wt of fluid acutely into the peritoneal space (equivalent to 4–7 liters of ascitic fluid in a 70-kg person). They found that peritoneal fluid expanded the lateral and anterior-posterior dimensions of the lower rib cage, moved the diaphragm cranially, and lengthened the diaphragm when passive. Active diaphragm contraction attenuated the effects of peritoneal fluid on diaphragm length, particularly for less dependent areas of the diaphragm. In a study in the Journal of Applied Physiology, Leduc and De Troyer (9) report the third in their series of investigations about the effects of ascites on the respiratory muscles in a canine model (7–9). They infused up to 200 ml/kg of fluid into the peritoneal space (equivalent to 14 liters of ascitic fluid in a 70-kg person), which is two to three times the volume used by Hubmayr et al. (6). Respiratory system responses at high ascites volumes were found to differ qualitatively as well as quantitatively from those at low to intermediate fluid volumes. The first study (8) found that abdominal elastance increased with ascites once fluid volumes exceeded 50 ml/kg. Transdiaphragmatic pressure in response to phrenic nerve stimulation remained stable as ascites volume increased to 100 ml/kg but fell by 45% with progressively higher ascitic fluid volumes. Ascites lengthened the unstimulated diaphragm, but only by 5%, and displaced its dome cranially. During active diaphragm contraction, ascites impaired muscle shortening considerably (by 65%), decreased the caudal movement of the diaphragm during contraction substantially (by 75%), and increased the circumference of the lower rib cage. The second study (7) used computed tomography to more closely examine changes in diaphragm length and shape. In this study, there was a trend for transdiaphragmatic pressure to increase with intraperitoneal infusion of fluid in amounts below 100 ml/kg, whereas with large volume infusions it decreased significantly (by 25%). The unstimulated diaphragm lengthened with increasing ascites, but by no more than 13%. The radius of curvature of the diaphragm did not change at fluid volumes up to 50 ml/kg, but then increased progressively thereafter, augmenting by 50%. The third study, reported presently (9), is directed toward abdominal muscle function. With peritoneal fluid infusion, the length of unstimulated internal oblique muscle increased progressively, by up to 60%. During electrical stimulation of the transversus abdominus and the internal oblique, intra-abdominal pressure was increased twoto threefold by ascites volumes up to 100 ml/kg but then decreased progressively with higher fluid volumes. Simultaneously measured airway pressure did not change significantly with low amounts of peritoneal fluid but decreased when the volumes of ascites was increased further. Contraction-induced muscle shortening was very low ( 6%) at high ascites volumes. Thus what emerges from these three studies (7–9) is that ascites impairs the respiratory actions of the diaphragm by a combination of increased load and changes in diaphragm geometry. Concomitant changes in diaphragm muscle length may improve muscle force but only partially compensate for the adverse effects of load and altered geometry. In contrast, for the abdominal muscles the impairment is due to increased load, heightened diaphragm elastance reducing the actions of the abdominal muscles on the lung, and, at high ascitic fluid volumes, considerable muscle elongation leading to unfavorable positioning on its length-tension relationship. The role of changes in abdominal muscle shape with ascites was not investigated in the animal models. As acknowledged by the authors (7–9), these studies used a model in which fluid was introduced rapidly into the peritoneal space. In contrast, many diseases leading to ascites are considerably more chronic, in that ascites develops and increases in amount over the course of weeks to months. Some studies on the effects of peritoneal dialysis suggest that the human respiAddress for reprint requests and other correspondence: E. van Lunteren, Pulmonary 111J(W), Cleveland VA Medical Center, 10701 East Blvd., Cleveland, OH 44106 (e-mail: [email protected]). J Appl Physiol 104: 1551–1552, 2008; doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.90469.2008.

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • Journal of applied physiology

دوره 104 6  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2008