Circulation, Vol 56, 647-651, Copyright © 1977 by American Heart Association
A De Troyer, JC Yernault and M Englert
The pulmonary function of ten adult patients with congenital pulmonary
valvular stenosis was investigated. The patients clearly showed smaller
lungs than healthy control subjects of equivalent age and height; lung
elastic recoil pressure was normal at any given percentage of measured
total lung capacity, indicating that postnatal parenchymal damage is not
the cause of the small lungs. The lung diffusing capacity for carbon
monoxide was reduced, reflecting the anatomical alterations of the
pulmonary vascular bed. Finally, the maximal flow-static recoil curves
showed a fixed (not dynamic) reduction of airway dimensions: the critical
transmural pressure in the collapsible flow-limiting segment (Ptm') was
normal, but the conductance of the S segment was lowered. These
abnormalities most likely reflect inadequate development of the lung and
suggest that pulmonary blood pressure may be an important determinant of
lung growth in the postnatal period.
ARTICLES
Lung hypoplasia in congenital pulmonary valve stenosis
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