ABNORMAL SKELETAL-MUSCLE OXIDATIVE CAPACITY AFTER LUNG TRANSPLANTATION BY P-31-MRS

Citation
Ab. Evans et al., ABNORMAL SKELETAL-MUSCLE OXIDATIVE CAPACITY AFTER LUNG TRANSPLANTATION BY P-31-MRS, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine, 155(2), 1997, pp. 615-621
Citations number
37
Categorie Soggetti
Emergency Medicine & Critical Care","Respiratory System
ISSN journal
1073449X
Volume
155
Issue
2
Year of publication
1997
Pages
615 - 621
Database
ISI
SICI code
1073-449X(1997)155:2<615:ASOCAL>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
Although lung transplantation improves exercise capacity by removal of a ventilatory limitation, recipients' postoperative maximum oxygen up take (Vo(2max)) remains markedly abnormal. To determine if abnormal sk eletal muscle oxidative capacity contributes to this impaired aerobic capacity, nine lung transplant recipients and eight healthy volunteers performed incremental quadriceps exercise to exhaustion with simultan eous measurements of pulmonary gas exchange, minute ventilation, blood lactate, and quadriceps muscle pH and phosphorylation potential by P- 31-magnetic resonance spectroscopy (P-31-MRS). Five to 38 mo after lun g transplantation, peak Vo(2) was decreased compared with that of norm al control subjects (6.7 +/- 0.4 versus 12.3 +/- 1.0 ml/min/kg, p < 0. 001), even after accounting for differences in age and lean body weigh t. Neither ventilation, arterial O-2 saturation nor mild anemia could account for the decrease in aerobic capacity. Quadriceps muscle intrac ellular pH (pH(i)) was more acidic at rest (7.07 +/- 0.01 versus 7.12 +/- 0.01 units, p < 0.05) and fell during exercise from baseline value s at a lower metabolic rate (282 +/- 21 versus 577 +/- 52 ml/min, p < 0.001). Regressions for pH(i) versus Vo(2), phosphocreatine/inorganic phosphate ratio (PCr/Pi) versus Vo(2), and blood lactate versus pH(i) were not different. Among transplant recipients, the metabolic rate at which pH(i) fell correlated closely with Vo(2max) (r = 0.87, p < 0.01 ). The persistent decrease in Vo(2max) after lung transplantation may be related to abnormalities of skeletal muscle oxidative capacity.