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Anesth Analg 1992; 75:977-982
© 1992 International Anesthesia Research Society
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Changes in Functional Residual Capacity and Regional Diaphragm Lengths After Upper Abdominal Surgery in Anesthetized Dogs

Juraj Sprung, MD, PhD, George M. Barnas, PhD, Eugene Y. Cheng, MD, and Joseph R. Rodarte, MD

Department of Anesthesiology, University of Maryland, Baltimore, Maryland; Department of Anesthesiology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin; Pulmonary Section, Department of Medicine and Physiology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; and Thoracic Disease Research Unit, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota

Abstract

The respiratory performance of the diaphragm may be altered by changes in mechanical or neural factors, or both, induced by upper abdominal surgery. We conducted this study to examine the effects of upper abdominal surgery on postoperative respiratory function. We studied resting lengths of four diaphragm regions, three in the costal and one in the crural diaphragm, with biplane videoroentgenography in six dogs immediately after upper abdominal surgery and up to 30 days postoperatively. Functional residual capacity was 16.7% smaller immediately after surgery compared with values obtained in the same animals after 30 days. Simultaneously measured resting lengths of each of the diaphragm regions immediately after surgery were longer, on average by 8.3%, than 30 days postoperatively. During the postoperative course, resting diaphragm lengths gradually and uniformly decreased as functional residual capacity increased. Phrenic nerve stimulation in four other dogs immediately after identical surgery resulted in large diaphragm shortening (from 42% to 55%), indicating that neither the diaphragm nor phrenic nerves were injured by the surgical manipulation. We hypothesize that respiratory dysfunction after upper abdominal surgery may be, at least in part, attributed to a decreased central drive for breathing caused by activation of the afferent limb of an inhibitory reflex owing to stretching of the diaphragm.







Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins Anesthesia & Analgesia® is published for the International Anesthesia Research Society® by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins and Stanford University Libraries' HighWire Press®. Copyright 1992 by the International Anesthesia Research Society. Online ISSN: 1526-7598   Print ISSN: 0003-2999 HighWire Press
Copyright © 1992 by the International Anesthesia Research Society.