Respiratory function and arterial blood gas were examined before and after a two-month exercise program performed in a pool filled with hot spring water in 22 patients (70.9 +/- 9.1 years of age) with stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (12 cases of bronchial asthma and 10 cases of pulmonary emphysema) treated at our hospital between 1991 and 1994. The ratio of forced expired volume in one second to forced vital capacity (FEV1%) was significantly increased after the exercise program (P < 0.05), whereas the ratio of forced vital capacity to predicted normal value (%FVC) did not change. In addition, a tendency toward an increase in peak flow without an increase in maximum expiratory flow at 25 and 50% (V25 and V50) was observed. Although PaO2 was not increased, PaCO2 was selectively decreased by the exercise program (P < 0.05). The changes in respiratory function and arterial blood gas were considered attributable to respiratory muscle training and small airway clearance. Exercise in a pool filled with hot spring water may be useful in treating chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
To investigate the behaviour of red cells in the microcirculation, we established a new capillary method using narrow fluorinated ethylenepropylene copolymer tubes with internal diameters of 12.5 and 25.0 microns. Red cell flow in the tubes under a given range of pressure was analysed through a video system connected to a microscope. The experimental condition was adjusted so that the velocity of the control normocytes would be compatible with that in corresponding vessels in vivo, 0.5-1.5 mm/s. In the 12.5 microns tube, normocytes obtained from 12 young normal volunteers ran in an axisymmetric edge-on orientation with a folded shape at higher pressures, but rolled along freely without deformation at lower pressures. Deformation during the passage of the microcytes obtained from four patients with polycythaemia vera complicated with iron-deficient microcytosis and 10 patients with iron deficiency anaemia was relatively mild, whereas that of the macrocytes obtained from eight patients with refractory anaemia was marked. Even after the screening effect at the tube entrance was taken into consideration, the velocities of both microcytes and macrocytes were found to be significantly lower than the control normocytes. Therefore this method may be a new way to investigate the flow properties of red cells in the microcirculation.
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