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The respiratory muscles in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients have reduced strength and resistance, leading to loss of the functional ability of these muscles. Lung hyperinflation is one of the main alterations, and air trapping is the main factor limiting diaphragmatic mobility (DM) in these patients; however, its correlation with functional parameters, exercise capacity, and indicators of disease severity remains underexplored. This study aimed to assess DM in stable COPD patients and relate the findings with parameters such as the 6-minute walk test distance, forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV 1 ) %predicted, residual volume (RV) %predicted, and dyspnea. An observational cohort study was conducted to measure DM using ultrasound both at rest (DMrest) and during deep inspiration (DMmax). Forty-nine patients with stable COPD were included in this study. There was a correlation between DMmax and FEV 1 %predicted ( R = 0.36; P = .012), RV %predicted (r = −0.42; P = .01), RV/total lung capacity (r = −0.61; P 4 (47.89 mm; mean difference = 14.05 ± 5.3 mm; 95% confidence interval = 25.09–3.01 mm). DM is correlated with bronchial obstruction (FEV 1 ), lung hyperinflation (RV and RV/total lung capacity), exercise capacity, and dyspnea in patients with COPD, suggesting its utility as an evaluative tool in this population.
Silva et al. (Fri,) studied this question.