Series "respiratory Monitoring: Revisiting Classical Physiological Principles with New Tools"
نویسندگان
چکیده
Magnetic stimulation for the measurement of respiratory and skeletal muscle function. W.D-C. Man, J. Moxham, M.I. Polkey. #ERS Journals Ltd 2004. ABSTRACT: Respiratory and skeletal muscle function is of interest in many areas of pulmonary and critical care medicine. The capacity of the respiratory muscle pump to respond to the load imposed by disease is the basis of an understanding of ventilatory failure. Over the last four decades, considerable progress has been made in quantifying the capacity of the respiratory muscles, in terms of strength, endurance and fatigue. With the development of magnetic stimulation, it has recently become possible to nonvolitionally assess the respiratory muscles in a clinically acceptable way. This is of particular interest in the investigation of patients receiving critical care, those with neuromuscular disease, and in children where volitional efforts are either not possible or likely to be sub-maximal. Furthermore, the adaptation of these techniques to quantify the strength of peripheral muscles, such as the quadriceps, has allowed the effects of muscle training or rehabilitation, uninfluenced by learning effect, to be assessed. This article focuses on the physiological basis of magnetic nerve stimulation, and reviews how the technique has been applied to measure muscle strength and fatigue, with particular emphasis upon the diaphragm. The translation of magnetic stimulation into a clinical tool is described, and how it may be of diagnostic, prognostic and therapeutic value in several areas of pulmonary medicine. In particular, the use of magnetic stimulation in neuromuscular disease, the intensive care setting, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and paediatrics will be discussed. Eur Respir J 2004; 24: 846–860. *Respiratory Muscle Laboratory, Guy9s, King9s and St Thomas9 School of Medicine, King9s College Hospital, and Royal Brompton Hospital, London, UK.
منابع مشابه
Series "respiratory Monitoring: Revisiting Classical Physiological Principles with New Tools"
Noninvasive monitoring of respiratory mechanics during sleep. R. Farré, J.M. Montserrat, D. Navajas. #ERS Journals Ltd 2004. ABSTRACT: The sleep apnoea–hypopnoea syndrome is characterised by recurrent obstructions of the upper airway, resulting in sleep disruption and arterial oxygen desaturations. Noninvasive assessment of respiratory mechanics during sleep is helpful in facilitating the diagn...
متن کاملRespiratory monitoring: revisiting classical physiological principles with new tools.
When interviewing junior doctors wishing to work in a hospital, a common question, at least in the UK, is to ask them to name an important development in respiratory medicine in the past 10 yrs. Since young doctors like results, they often suggest some therapeutic aspect of applied physiology, such as noninvasive ventilation. In fact, we propose that, even in the post-genomic age, the immediacy...
متن کاملDetecting Specific Health-Related Events Using an Integrated Sensor System for Vital Sign Monitoring
In this paper, a new method for the detection of apnea/hypopnea periods in physiological data is presented. The method is based on the intelligent combination of an integrated sensor system for long-time cardiorespiratory signal monitoring and dedicated signal-processing packages. Integrated sensors are a PVDF film and conductive fabric sheets. The signal processing package includes dedicated r...
متن کاملNon-invasive ventilation during sleep: time to define new tools in the systematic evaluation of the technique.
Non-invasive ventilation (NIV) has been remarkably effective in the management of chronic respiratory failure, despite initially rudimentary equipment and limited understanding of what was actually happening, minute by minute when ventilation was applied. Modern ventilators, controlled by complex algorithms, and with integrated monitoring allow for sophisticated customisation of ventilatory sup...
متن کاملSpine revisited: principles and parlance redefined.
A revised appreciation of the evolution and the nature of bone in general and of vertebrae in particular, allows revisiting the human spine to usher in some new principles and more rational parlance, that embody spine's phylogeny, ontogeny, anatomy and physiology. Such an approach accords primacy to spine's soft-tissues, and relegates to its bones a secondary place.
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2004