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Supplemental Oxygen and Exercise Performance in Patients with Cystic Fibrosis with Severe Pulmonary Disease

Overview
Journal Chest
Publisher Elsevier
Specialty Pulmonary Medicine
Date 1992 Jan 1
PMID 1729110
Citations 11
Authors
Affiliations
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Abstract

Patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) and advanced pulmonary disease have pulmonary limitation of exercise, often associated with arterial oxygen desaturation. Improving oxygenation during exercise by providing supplemental oxygen may improve exercise performance in these patients. To test this, we performed graded exercise stress tests in 22 CF patients with severe pulmonary disease (mean PaO2, 64 +/- 2 mm Hg [+/- SE]; PaCO2 46 +/- 2 mm Hg; RV/TLC, 57 +/- 4 percent; FEV1, 38 +/- 4 percent of predicted; FEF25-75%, 13 +/- 2 percent of predicted; median age, 26 years) and compared them to 21 controls (RV/TLC, 27 +/- 4 percent; FEV1, 112 +/- 2 percent of predicted; FEF25-75%, 80 +/- 4 percent of predicted; median age, 29 years). Each subject performed graded exercise stress tests while breathing FIO2 of 0.21 and FIO2 of 0.30. Subjects were blinded to the composition of the inspired gas, and the order of testing was randomized. We found that CF subjects exercised longer, had a higher maximal VO2, higher O2 pulse, and less arterial oxygen desaturation when receiving supplemental O2. Control subjects exercised longer when breathing supplemental O2 but had no significant change in maximal VO2, O2 pulse, or SaO2. Both CF and control subjects had increased end-tidal PCO2 when exercising while breathing supplemental O2. We conclude that CF patients with advanced pulmonary disease have increased exercise tolerance and aerobic capacity when exercising while breathing supplemental O2.

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