Inspiratory Muscle Weakness and Dyspnea in Chronic Heart Failure
- 1 August 1992
- journal article
- Published by American Thoracic Society in American Review of Respiratory Disease
- Vol. 146 (2) , 467-472
- https://doi.org/10.1164/ajrccm/146.2.467
Abstract
Dyspnea is a common, disabling symptom in chronic heart failure, yet the underlying mechanisms remain unknown. The respiratory muscle pump is composed of skeletal muscles whose strength directly influences the pump's performance. Respiratory muscle weakness is important in the dyspnea experienced by some patients with pulmonary disease; however, the role of the respiratory muscle pump in the dyspnea of chronic heart failure has not previously been examined. To assess respiratory muscle strength and its relation to dyspnea during daily activity, we measured maximum inspiratory and expiratory mouth pressures as indices of respiratory muscle strength and the baseline dyspnea index in nine stable, chronic cardiac pump failure patients who had no evidence of primary lung disease, and in nine age- and sex-matched healthy control subjects. The chronic heart failure patients, when compared with their matched control subjects, had reduced inspiratory and expiratory muscle strength, and both inspiratory and expiratory muscle strength were significantly correlated with dyspnea during daily activity (r2 = 0.80, p = 0.001 and r2 = 0.45, p = 0.05, respectively). Inspiratory muscle strength accounted for all of the variance in dyspnea that was correlated with respiratory muscle strength when the relative contributions of inspiratory and expiratory muscle strength were examined. There was no correlation between lung volumes or spirometry and dyspnea in the heart failure patients. These findings indicate that patients with stable chronic heart failure have inspiratory and expiratory muscle weakness and further suggest that the respiratory muscle pump significantly contributes to the dyspnea during the activities of daily living.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Future perspectives in the management of congestive heart failureThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1990
- Monolithic integrated photoreceiver for 1.3–1.55-μm wavelengths: Association of a Schottky photodiode and a field-effect transistor on GaInP-GaInAs heteroepitaxyJournal of Applied Physics, 1988
- Evaluation of Clinical Methods for Rating DyspneaChest, 1988
- Factors determining symptoms in heart failure: comparison of fast and slow exercise tests.Heart, 1986
- Assessment and Management of BreathlessnessChest, 1985
- The Measurement of DyspneaChest, 1984
- Exercise intolerance in patients with chronic left heart failure: Relation to oxygen transport and ventilatory abnormalitiesThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1983
- Respiratory muscle fatigue during cardiogenic shockJournal of Applied Physiology, 1981
- Respiratory Muscles: The Vital PumpChest, 1980
- Respiratory mechanics in airways obstruction associated with inspiratory dyspnoea.Thorax, 1976