1950
DOI: 10.1136/jech.4.1.1
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The Total Lung Volume and its Subdivisions. A Study in Physiological Norms: I. Basic Data

Abstract: Many previous workers have published the results of their estimations of the total lung volume and its subdivisions in normal subjects. These are tabulated below in Table I. It will be seen that Hurtado and his co-workers, and Aslett, D'Arcy Hart, and McMichael are the only two groups who have studied any large number of normal subjects. Lassen, Cournand, and Richards (1937) have pointed out that the method used by the Rochester workers (see Nos. 8-11 in Table I) is somewhat TABLE I NUMBER, SEX, AGE RANGE, AND… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…for inspiratory capacity, expiratory reserve and residual volumes, respectively. Lung volume studies of normal adults using the open-circuit method (28) or various modifications of the closed-circuit method (9,22,(25)(26)(27)(32)(33)(34) cannot be compared with our data for boys because of the effect of age upon the various subdivisions and because in most cases the tests were conducted in the sitting posture (22,(27)(28)(29).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…for inspiratory capacity, expiratory reserve and residual volumes, respectively. Lung volume studies of normal adults using the open-circuit method (28) or various modifications of the closed-circuit method (9,22,(25)(26)(27)(32)(33)(34) cannot be compared with our data for boys because of the effect of age upon the various subdivisions and because in most cases the tests were conducted in the sitting posture (22,(27)(28)(29).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 93%
“…The mean weight of middle lobes obtained from women was 63 per cent of that from men. Physiological studies (12,13) material reported here as elastin. Thus the lung elastin residues were found to enter solution on exposure to elastase.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Since the values for residual volume used in the calculation of DL were measured in the sitting position, the significance of the changes in DL depends on the constancy of the residual volume with changes in position. Therefore, the original calculations of DL have been 'corrected' assuming a 20 per cent decrease in residual volume on changing from a sitting to a standing position and a 30 per cent increase on changing from a sitting to a supine position, the largest changes in residual volume reported in the literature (20,21). When the corrections were applied, DL was still found to be greater in the supine than in the sitting position in six out of seven subjects, but there was no longer a significant alteration on changing from sitting to standing.…”
Section: Position Of the Bodymentioning
confidence: 99%