Does the nitrogen single-breath washout test contribute to detecting pulmonary involvement in rheumatoid arthritis? A pilot study.
Elizabeth Jauhar Cardoso BessaFelipe de Miranda Carbonieri RibeiroGeraldo da Rocha Castelar PinheiroAgnaldo Jose LopesPublished in: BMC research notes (2019)
Twenty-one patients with RA underwent clinical evaluation, pulmonary function tests (PFTs), including the N2SBW test, and computed tomography (CT). The main tomographic findings were air trapping and bronchiectasis (57.1% and 23.8% of cases, respectively). According to the phase III slope of the N2SBW (phase III slope), 11 and 10 patients had values < 120% predicted and > 120% predicted, respectively. Five patients with limited involvement on CT had a phase III slope > 120%. The residual volume/total lung capacity ratio was significantly different between patients with phase III slopes < 120% and > 120% (P = 0.024). Additionally, rheumatoid factor positivity was higher in patients with a phase III slope > 120% (P = 0.021). In patients with RA and airway disease on CT, the N2SBW test detects inhomogeneity in the ventilation distribution in approximately half of the cases, even in those with normal conventional PFT results.
Keyphrases
- phase iii
- computed tomography
- open label
- rheumatoid arthritis
- clinical trial
- dual energy
- image quality
- contrast enhanced
- positron emission tomography
- double blind
- clinical evaluation
- phase ii
- placebo controlled
- end stage renal disease
- disease activity
- magnetic resonance imaging
- chronic kidney disease
- ankylosing spondylitis
- newly diagnosed
- pulmonary hypertension
- magnetic resonance
- prognostic factors
- cystic fibrosis
- randomized controlled trial
- peritoneal dialysis
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- systemic sclerosis
- respiratory failure
- mechanical ventilation
- rheumatoid arthritis patients
- cone beam