Department of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care Medicine, University Medical Centre Schleswig-Holstein, Campus Kiel, Kiel, Germany.
Physiol Meas. 2024 Jul 12;45(7). doi: 10.1088/1361-6579/ad5ef7.
Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) has been used to determine regional lung ventilation distribution in humans for decades, however, the effect of biological sex on the findings has hardly ever been examined. The aim of our study was to determine if the spatial distribution of ventilation assessed by EIT during quiet breathing was influenced by biological sex.219 adults with no known acute or chronic lung disease were examined in sitting position with the EIT electrodes placed around the lower chest (6th intercostal space). EIT data were recorded at 33 images/s during quiet breathing for 60 s. Regional tidal impedance variation was calculated in all EIT image pixels and the spatial distribution of the values was determined using the established EIT measures of centre of ventilation in ventrodorsal (CoV) and right-to-left direction (CoV), the dorsal and right fraction of ventilation, and ventilation defect score.After exclusion of one subject due to insufficient electrode contact, 218 data sets were analysed (120 men, 98 women) (age: 53 ± 18 vs 50 ± 16 yr (= 0.2607), body mass index: 26.4 ± 4.0 vs 26.4 ± 6.6 kg m(= 0.9158), mean ± SD). Highly significant differences in ventilation distribution were identified between men and women between the right and left chest sides (CoV: 47.0 ± 2.9 vs 48.8 ± 3.3% of chest diameter (< 0.0001), right fraction of ventilation: 0.573 ± 0.067 vs 0.539 ± 0.071 (= 0.0004)) and less significant in the ventrodorsal direction (CoV: 55.6 ± 4.2 vs 54.5 ± 3.6% of chest diameter (= 0.0364), dorsal fraction of ventilation: 0.650 ± 0.121 vs 0.625 ± 0.104 (= 0.1155)). Ventilation defect score higher than one was found in 42.5% of men but only in 16.6% of women.Biological sex needs to be considered when EIT findings acquired in upright subjects in a rather caudal examination plane are interpreted. Sex differences in chest anatomy and thoracoabdominal mechanics may explain the results.
电阻抗断层成像(EIT)已被用于数十年间测量人体局部肺通气分布,但生物学性别对 EIT 结果的影响几乎从未被研究过。我们的研究目的是确定在安静呼吸期间,EIT 评估的通气空间分布是否受生物学性别影响。
我们共检查了 219 例无已知急性或慢性肺部疾病的成年人,他们取坐位,EIT 电极放置在胸部下段(第 6 肋间隙)周围。在安静呼吸期间,以 33 幅/秒的速度记录 EIT 数据,持续 60 秒。在所有 EIT 图像像素中计算局部潮气量阻抗变化,并使用已建立的 EIT 通气中值测量(背腹向 CoV 和左右向 CoV、通气的背侧和右侧分数以及通气缺陷评分)确定值的空间分布。
排除 1 例因电极接触不良而数据不足的受试者后,分析了 218 例数据(120 名男性,98 名女性)(年龄:53 ± 18 岁与 50 ± 16 岁(= 0.2607),体重指数:26.4 ± 4.0 千克/米²与 26.4 ± 6.6 千克/米²(= 0.9158),均值 ± 标准差)。男性和女性左右胸部之间的通气分布存在显著差异(CoV:47.0 ± 2.9%与 48.8 ± 3.3%的胸径(< 0.0001),通气的右侧分数:0.573 ± 0.067%与 0.539 ± 0.071(= 0.0004)),在背腹向方向的差异较小(CoV:55.6 ± 4.2%与 54.5 ± 3.6%的胸径(= 0.0364),通气的背侧分数:0.650 ± 0.121%与 0.625 ± 0.104(= 0.1155))。男性中发现 42.5%的通气缺陷评分高于 1,而女性中仅为 16.6%。
当解释直立受试者在相对尾部检查平面获取的 EIT 结果时,需要考虑生物学性别。胸部解剖结构和胸腹部力学的性别差异可能解释了这些结果。