1 From the Cardiopulmonary Unit, Department of Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, and the Medical Clinics of Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester, New York.
The changes in pulmonary blood flow, pressure, and volume during supine exercise are studied in seven patients without cardiovascular abnormality, 12 patients with aortic valve disease, 13 patients with mitral valve disease, and five patients with primary myocardial or pericardial disease. The degree of distensibility of the pulmonary vascular bed is assessed by the simultaneous changes in the magnitude of the pulmonary distending pressure (average of pulmonary artery and left atrial pressure) and of the pulmonary blood volume.
© 1967 American Heart Association, Inc.
Distensibility Characteristics of the Human Pulmonary Vascular Bed
Study of the Pressure-Volume Response to Exercise in Patients with and without Heart Disease
Key Words: Aortic valve disease Constrictive pericarditis Idiopathic cardiomyopathy Pericardial effusion Aortic aneurysm Mitral valve disease Cardiac catheterization
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