Crying Vital Capacity
- 1 January 1961
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in American Journal of Diseases of Children
- Vol. 101 (1) , 67-74
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archpedi.1961.04020020069011
Abstract
There is no universally accepted means of evaluating the newborn infant with respiratory distress. Various workers have devised different schemes of clinical classification and roentgenological observation of these infants.1-5 Laboratory measures of pulmonary function seldom have been applied to the routine evaluation of the distressed newborn infant. The present study describes a simple and inexpensive measure of a lung volume in the newborn infant. This may prove a useful addition to current clinical methods of observation of the infant with respiratory distress. The physiology of the neonatal respiratory distress syndrome has been reviewed by James.6 Tidal volume is normal or slightly reduced. The more or less normal tidal volume is possible because of increased work performed against increased elastic resistance of the lungs. With the increased respiratory rate, elevated minute volume results. In spite of the adjustments by the infant which result in normal or increased ventilation, theThis publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relation Between Mechanics of Respiration, Lung Size and Body Size From Birth to Young AdulthoodJournal of Applied Physiology, 1958
- THE PHYSICAL PROPERTIES OF THE LUNGS IN RELATION TO THE SUBDIVISIONS OF LUNG VOLUME1957
- Measurements of Pulmonary Compliance in Seventy Healthy Young AdultsJournal of Applied Physiology, 1956