Interpretation of Cardiopulmonary Exercise Tests (CPET): Part 1

preview_player
Показать описание
Pulmonary Interpretation by Zachary Q. Morris, MD, FCCP and Said Chaaban, MD of the Physiology, Pulmonary Function and Rehabilitation NetWork.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

I am an exercise physiologist who performs vo2max tests on elite athletes, but it’s interesting to learn about the clinical part.

In our discipline, a huge spo2 drop is normal (what spo2 sensors do you use?), and exercise performance is more related to muscle oxygen extraction, cardiac output, hemoglobin mass, h+ buffering

ДенисВарванец
Автор

This really helped me to understand parts of my CPET results. I feel better prepared for my first Pulmonary Specialist appt. next week. Thank you.

marcscheel
Автор

Can you explain your comments from time-point 8:39 - If declining VCO2/VE is associated increasing VD/VT, and declining VCO2/VE is a reciprocal of increasing VE/VCO2, should increasing VE/VCO2 not suggest DECLINING VD/VT? You said increasing VE/VCO2 suggests ‘increasing’ VD/VT which shouldn’t be if they are reciprocal and should have opposite effects??

I plugged in numbers to do the math and I found declining numbers as well? Thanks for clarifying.

chiomaogbonna
Автор

I done CPET test, but I didn't found doctor who can understand results 😏

majat