4.6 Article

Lung and thorax development during adolescence:: relationship with pubertal status

Journal

EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY JOURNAL
Volume 20, Issue 5, Pages 1292-1298

Publisher

EUROPEAN RESPIRATORY SOC JOURNALS LTD
DOI: 10.1183/09031936.02.00208102

Keywords

adolescence; diffusing capacity; lung growth; reference values; thoracic volume index

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The aim of the present study was to define reference values for lung volumes and the lung transfer factor for carbon monoxide (TL,CO) for an adolescent population using thoracic volume index (TVI) and an index of pubertal stage in order to account for the variation in growth pattern between adolescents. TVI, pubertal stage by Tanner scale (PST), time since menarche, functional residual capacity measured using the helium-dilution technique, vital capacity, total lung capacity and TL,CO measured using a steady-state method were determined in 51 males (aged 13-20 yrs; PST T3-T5) and 52 females (aged 13-18 yrs; PST T2-T4; all but three had already undergone menarche). In male adolescents, height, weight, TVI, lung volumes and TL,CO increased with age. This was not the case in female adolescents. In males, the TVI was the independent variable that best correlated with pulmonary volumes. In females, height was the independent variable that best correlated with pulmonary volumes. In both sexes, the variable that best correlated with TL,CO was PST, associated with height in males. This cross-sectional study provides prediction equations for lung volumes and the lung transfer factor for carbon monoxide taking into account thoracic volume index and pubertal stage. It shows that, in adolescent males, lung and thoracic development occurs during and until the end of puberty. Conversely, in adolescent females, lung development is almost finished following menarche.

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