This study examined right ventricular function during exercise in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease to answer the following questions: Is there a significant correlation between oxygen consumption at maximal exercise and exercise right ventricular ejection fraction? Does the right ventricular ejection fraction response to exercise correlate with exercise changes in pulmonary artery pressure, total pulmonary resistance or pulmonary vascular resistance? Which combinations of cardiac, ventilatory and blood gas variables are the best predictors of oxygen consumption at maximal exercise? Twenty-six patients with stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease performed symptom-limited supine bicycle exercise with simultaneous hemodynamic and radionuclide ventriculographic measurements. The oxygen consumption at maximal exercise correlated with the exercise right ventricular ejection fraction (n = 21, r = 0.66; p less than 0.005), exercise stroke volume (r = 0.68; p less than 0.001), exercise cardiac output (r = 0.77; p less than 0.00005) and exercise ventilation (r = 0.85; p less than 0.00001). The change in right ventricular ejection fraction from rest to exercise correlated inversely with the change from rest to exercise in total pulmonary resistance (r = -0.51; p less than 0.05) but not with the change in mean pulmonary pressure (r = -0.37) or in pulmonary vascular resistance (r = 0.09). Multivariate analysis showed that the variables giving the highest combined correlation with oxygen consumption were ventilation and right ventricular ejection fraction (r = 0.95, adjusted r2 = 0.88). These results suggest that exercise oxygen consumption of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is related to right ventricular systolic function, exercise right ventricular dysfunction is related, in part, to abnormal exercise total pulmonary resistance, and exercise limitation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease occurs as a result of the dynamic interaction between disordered right heart function and ventilation.
The data demonstrate the value of analyzing a consecutive series of patients with advanced head and neck cancer. By including patients with comorbidities and those who are noncompliant, we determined a realistic expectation of patient outcomes. By including all patients, the data dramatically show the impact of age, comorbidity, and advanced stage on survival. The survival of patients who underwent elective radiation therapy in combination with neck dissection was similar to that of patients treated with primary tumor surgery. This was particularly true for oropharyngeal tumors. The site and stage-specific data are useful in counseling patients with advanced head and neck cancer regarding treatment choices.
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