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Articles in PresS, published online ahead of print October 18, 2002
J Appl Physiol, 10.1152/jap.00568.2002
Submitted on June 27, 2002
Accepted on October 13, 2002
1 Respiratory Department, Faulkner/Brigham and Women Hospitals, Boston, MA, USA
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: andrey{at}stethographics.com.
The transpulmonary speed of sound input at the mouth has been shown to vary with lung volume. To avoid the disadvantages that exist in certain clinical situations in inputting sound at the mouth, we input sound in the supraclavicular space of 21 healthy volunteers to determine if similar information on the relationship of sound speed to lung volume could be obtained. We measured the transit time at multiple microphones placed over the chest wall using a 16-channel lung sound analyzer (Stethographics). There was a tight distribution of transit times in this population of subjects. At functional residual capacity it was 9±1ms (Mean±SD) at the apical sites and 13±1ms at the lung bases. The sound speed at total lung capacity was 24±2m/s and was 22±2m/s at residual volume (p<0.001). In all subjects the speed of sound was faster at higher lung volume. This improved method of studying the mechanism of sound transmission in the lung may help in the development of noninvasive tools for diagnosis and monitoring lung diseases.
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