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Journal ArticleDOI

Physiology of obesity and effects on lung function.

TLDR
Obesity has effects on lung function that can reduce respiratory well-being, even in the absence of specific respiratory disease, and may also exaggerate the effects of existing airway disease.
Abstract
In obese people, the presence of adipose tissue around the rib cage and abdomen and in the visceral cavity loads the chest wall and reduces functional residual capacity (FRC). The reduction in FRC and in expiratory reserve volume is detectable, even at a modest increase in weight. However, obesity has little direct effect on airway caliber. Spirometric variables decrease in proportion to lung volumes, but are rarely below the normal range, even in the extremely obese, while reductions in expiratory flows and increases in airway resistance are largely normalized by adjusting for lung volumes. Nevertheless, the reduction in FRC has consequences for other aspects of lung function. A low FRC increases the risk of both expiratory flow limitation and airway closure. Marked reductions in expiratory reserve volume may lead to abnormalities in ventilation distribution, with closure of airways in the dependent zones of the lung and ventilation perfusion inequalities. Greater airway closure during tidal breathing is associated with lower arterial oxygen saturation in some subjects, even though lung CO-diffusing capacity is normal or increased in the obese. Bronchoconstriction has the potential to enhance the effects of obesity on airway closure and thus on ventilation distribution. Thus obesity has effects on lung function that can reduce respiratory well-being, even in the absence of specific respiratory disease, and may also exaggerate the effects of existing airway disease.

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Citations
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Effects of Obesity On United States Farmers: A Pilot Study

TL;DR: Key findings of this research support obesity as an increasing concern among U.S. farmers which can result in a decline in work ability and psychometric evaluation of the Work Ability Index supports the use of this tool for research and clinical assessment in this population.
Book ChapterDOI

Obesity and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

TL;DR: The current findings suggest that the presence of obesity has implications for interpretation of diagnostic measurements and management of patients with COPD, and future studies need to show the overall effects of nutritional interventions in obese COPD patients and determine the optimal BMI for an obese patient with COPd.
Journal ArticleDOI

Association of neck circumference and pulmonary function in children

TL;DR: NC was identified as a novel anthropometric index that is strongly correlated with respiratory functions in children, particularly in children with obesity and a large NC, which could help with early and prompt determination of respiratory complications of obesity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fast-track rescue weight reduction therapy to achieve rapid technical operability for emergency bariatric surgery in patients with life-threatening inoperable severe obesity - A proof of concept study.

TL;DR: In this paper , a rescue weight reduction therapy (RWR) consisting of liraglutide, a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist, a leucine-rich amino acid infusion and a hypocaloric diet was investigated for patients with severe obesity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Postoperative respiratory management of morbidly obese patient

TL;DR: Morbidly obese patients are at increased risk of respiratory complications, appropriate management of these patients prevents perioperative respiratory complications and drugs related to respiratory function, and chest physiotherapy will be reviewed to manage these patients properly.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of Body Mass Index on Lung Volumes

TL;DR: It was showed that BMI has significant effects on all of the lung volumes, and the greatest effects were on FRC and ERV, which occurred at BMI values < 30 kg/m2, which will assist clinicians when interpreting PFT results in patients with normal airway function.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of obesity on respiratory function

TL;DR: It is concluded that obesity does not usually preclude use of usual predictors, and an abnormal pulmonary function test value should be considered as caused by intrinsic lung disease and not by obesity, except in those with extreme obesity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Compliance of the respiratory system and its components in health and obesity.

TL;DR: The compliance of the total respiratory system and its components was studied in normal and obese spontaneously breathing unanesthetized subjects and found that the former are more compliant than the latter.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effects of body mass on lung volumes, respiratory mechanics, and gas exchange during general anesthesia

TL;DR: The effects of body mass index (BMI) on functional residual capacity (FRC), respiratory mechanics, respiratory mechanics (compliance and resistance), gas exchange, and the inspiratory mechanical work done per liter of ventilation during general anesthesia are investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Obesity on Respiratory Resistance

TL;DR: It is suggested that in addition to the elastic load, obese subjects have to overcome increased respiratory resistance resulting from the reduction in lung volumes related to being overweight.
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