Significance of End-Tidal Pco2 Response to Exercise and Its Relation to Functional Capacity in Patients With Chronic Heart Failure
- 1 March 2001
- Vol. 119 (3) , 811-817
- https://doi.org/10.1378/chest.119.3.811
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lung Function and Exercise Gas Exchange in Chronic Heart FailureCirculation, 1997
- Ventilatory and gas exchange abnormalities on exercise in chronic heart failureEuropean Respiratory Journal, 1995
- Acute effect of percutaneous transvenous mitral commissurotomy on ventilatory and hemodynamic responses to exercise. Pathophysiological basis for early symptomatic improvement.Circulation, 1993
- Exercise hyperventilation chronic congestive heart failure, and its relation to functional capacity and hemodynamicsThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1992
- Mechanism of the increased ventilatory response to exercise in patients with chronic heart failure.Heart, 1990
- Diagnosis of Pulmonary Embolism Based upon Alveolar Dead Space AnalysisChest, 1989
- Increased exercise ventilation in patients with chronic heart failure: intact ventilatory control despite hemodynamic and pulmonary abnormalities.Circulation, 1988
- Comparison of Arterial-End-Tidal PCO2 Difference and Dead Space/Tidal Volume Ratio in Respiratory FailureChest, 1987
- Oxygen utilization and ventilation during exercise in patients with chronic cardiac failure.Circulation, 1982
- The Arterial to End-Expiratory Carbon Dioxide Tension Gradient in Acute Pulmonary Embolism and Other Cardiopulmonary DiseasesChest, 1974