In 90 patients with hypercapnic-hypoxemic chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), noninvasive anthropometric and biochemical nutritional indices were measured to assess the prevalence and features of malnutrition in COPD and to analyze the relationship between nutritional depletion and the severity of the disease. A significant inverse relationship was found between PaCO2 and body weight; a parallel decrease of both somatic proteins and body-energy stores of fat appears to be paired with decreasing body weight. Deterioration of nutritional status occurred in the COPD patients considered despite seemingly adequate calorie and protein intakes, although in patients with more severe impairment of pulmonary gas exchange, calorie intake was significantly lower compared with basal energy expenditure. In the course of hypercapnic-hypoxemic COPD malnutrition is common, it is related to the severity of the disease as judged by the need for hospitalization and degree of impairment of gas exchange, and it may be present despite apparently adequate nutrient intake.
Quadriceps femoris muscle needle biopsies were performed in 21 patients with chronic obstructive lung disease (COLD) and acute respiratory failure (ARF) and in 21 age-matched healthy control subjects. Muscle samples were analysed to obtain intracellular bicarbonate and pH values from total acid-labile carbon dioxide content. Muscle potassium, magnesium and sodium content were also determined, as well as water compartments. Skeletal muscle of COLD patients with ARF showed intracellular acidosis and reduced potassium and magnesium content. Total muscle water increase was linked to extracellular water increment. It was concluded that in COLD patients with ARF an overall derangement of skeletal muscle metabolism is present.
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