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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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Journal ArticleDOI

Infectious virus in exhaled breath of symptomatic seasonal influenza cases from a college community

TL;DR: It is shown that sneezing is rare and not important for—and that coughing is not required for—influenza virus aerosolization, and that upper and lower airway infection are independent and that fine-particle exhaled aerosols reflect infection in the lung.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of obesity on respiratory function.

TL;DR: Obesity has long been recognized as having significant effects on respiratory function, and some clear patterns have emerged, but the distribution of fat, that is, upper versus lower body, may be more important than body mass index.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adult-onset asthma: is it really different?

TL;DR: Understanding of the underlying mechanism of adult-onset asthma and identification of specific phenotypes may further the understanding of pathophysiology and treatment response, leading to better targeting of both existing and new approaches for personalised management.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Abdominal Obesity and Respiratory Function in Men and Women in the EPIC-Norfolk Study, United Kingdom

TL;DR: In the general adult population, abdominal fat deposition may play a role in the impairment of respiratory function among the abdominally obese, and the association remained significant among nonobese nonsmokers without preexisting respiratory disease.
Journal ArticleDOI

Expiratory flow limitation and intrinsic positive end-expiratory pressure in obesity.

TL;DR: It is concluded that in OS tidal breathing can be affected by EFL and PEEPi; two-thirds of the subjects with a mean body mass index of 44 +/- 5 kg/m2 and six age-matched normal-weight control subjects (CS) are studied in different body positions; and the increased diaphragmatic load in the supine position is, in part, related to PEPi.
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Some effects of restriction of chest cage expansion on pulmonary function in man: an experimental study

TL;DR: The entire pressure-volume curve of the lung was altered, but was restored to normal when a deep inspiration was taken after release of the restricting apparatus, and the escape of gas from poorly ventilated regions of the Lung was detected.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of posture on respiratory mechanics in obesity

TL;DR: The site and mechanism of the increase in Supine Rrs and reduction in supine Xrs and the mechanism maintaining supine FRC in obesity all need further investigation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Respiratory function in the morbidly obese before and after weight loss.

TL;DR: Losing weight in the morbidly obese is associated with improved lung function, and the effects of smoking on lung function could be detected after weight loss, but were masked before treatment by the opposing effects of obesity on residual volume and functional residual capacity.
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