Ruy Amazonas Lamar Filho, Antonio Augusto Soares da Fonseca,
Maria Alice Melo Neves, Laércio Moreira Valença
Objective: To determine the occurrence of exercise-induced bronchoconstriction and analyze cardiorespiratory response during maximal exercise in asthmatic patients. Patients and methods: Fourteen subjects with asthma (FEV1 of 86.3% predicted), as defined by the American Thoracic Society criteria were submitted to a maximal exercise test. Volume-flow curves were performed prior to progressive maximal exercise and seven and 15 minutes after it. Six patients (43%) showed a decline in FEV1 equal or greater than 15% after exercise (group I). The remaining patients constituted group II. Group I showed a FEV1 fall of 40.9% and 26.7%, seven and 15 minutes after exercise, respectively. In group II, there was a decrease of 2.6%, after 7 min and an increase of 1.2% after 15 min. At peak exercise, both groups reached heart rate above 91% of reference values; peak work was 82.7% and 62.5%, VO2max (mL/kg/min) 93.5% and 58,9% and VEmax 91.5% and 63.8%, respectively, in groups I and II. These differences were statistically significant. The correlation between the FEV1 fall rate (7 min post-exercise) and VEmax (% predicted) has showed a coefficient r = 0.8989 in group I and r = 0.3629 in group II. There was no correlation between delta VEF1 and VO2max (% predicted) in both groups. These findings showed that, in exercise-induced asthma patients, the occurrence of bronchoconstriction correlated with the level of maximal ventilation, but not with physical fitness.
Keywords: Exercise induced asthma. Bronchoconstriction. Tidal volume. Respiratory function tests.