Measurement of single breath-hold carbon monoxide diffusing capacity in healthy infants and toddlers

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Abstract

We describe a method for measuring carbon monoxide diffusing capacity (DLCO) and alveolar volume (VA) in sleeping infants, using a single 4-sec breath-hold technique. The breath-hold maneuver is obtained by inducing a respiratory pause of the respiratory system. Several inflations of the respiratory system with room air to a lung volume with an airway pressure of 30 cmH2O (V30) inhibit inspiratory effort. The respiratory system is then inflated with a test gas containing helium and a stable isotope of carbon monoxide (C18O), and a respiratory pause is maintained for 4 sec and followed by passive expiration to functional residual capacity. Concentrations of helium and C18O are continuously measured with a mass spectrometer. Twelve healthy infants between 6-22 months of age were evaluated. For 9 of 12 subjects, duplicate measurements of alveolar volume at 30 cmH2O (VA30) and DLCO were within 10%, which are the recommendations for older children and adults. Among these 9 subjects, values of VA30 and DLCO increased with increasing body length (r2 = 0.82 and 0.79, respectively). The remaining 3 subjects had two values within 10-15%. Measurement of VA and DLCO with the single breath-hold technique at an elevated lung volume offers the potential to assess growth and development of the lung parenchyma early in life. © 2006 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Castillo, A., Llapur, C. J., Martinez, T., Kisling, J., Williams-Nkomo, T., Coates, C., & Tepper, R. S. (2006). Measurement of single breath-hold carbon monoxide diffusing capacity in healthy infants and toddlers. Pediatric Pulmonology, 41(6), 544–550. https://doi.org/10.1002/ppul.20403

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