Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 157, No. 1, Jan 1998, 95-98.
Effects of abdominal strapping on forced expiration in tetraplegic patients [In Process Citation]
M Estenne, A Van Muylem, M Gorini, W Kinnear, A Heilporn and A De Troyer
Laboratory of Cardiorespiratory Physiology, Erasme University Hospital and Rehabilitation Center, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgium.
Patients with traumatic transection of the lower segments of the cervical
cord contract the clavicular portion of the pectoralis major during forced
expiration and cough, and the rise in intrathoracic pressure resulting from
this contraction produces dynamic airway compression in many patients.
Because the abdominal muscles are paralyzed, however, there is paradoxical
expansion of the abdomen, which may reduce the rise in intrathoracic
pressure and the degree of airway collapse. To evaluate the magnitude of
this effect, we measured expiratory flow rate (Vexp) and esophageal
pressure (Pes) during a series of forced expiratory vital capacity
maneuvers and constructed isovolume-pressure flow (IVPF) curves before and
after abdominal strapping in eight C5-8 tetraplegic subjects. Strapping
produced small and inconsistent changes in maximal Vexp and Pes and
resulted in the development of small flow plateaus in only four patients.
In tetraplegic subjects, abdominal strapping thus has small effects on
forced expiration and is unlikely, therefore, to improve the efficiency of
cough.