ABSTRACT
Pregnancy is essentially a physiological process, which
involves a great number of physiological changes, affecting
virtually all the organ systems in the body. Literature is sparse on
the changes in ventilatory function during pregnancy in our
locality. The objective of this study is to establish the value of
Forced Vital Capacity (FVC), Forced Expiratory Volume in one
second (FEV1), FEV1/FVC ratio and Peak Expiratory Flow Rate
(PEFR) during pregnancy.
The study is a descriptive cross sectional study carried out at
the antenatal and booking clinics of the University of Nigeria
Teaching Hospital (UNTH), Ituku-Ozalla, Kenechukwu specialist
hospital Enugu and Chukwuasokam maternity hospital in Emene.
Two hundred (200) normal pregnant women and 100 non-pregnant
women were recruited. A standard Spirometer (Micro lab ML3500
MK8, Cardinal Health Germany 234 GMBH) was used to
determine the ventilatory function. The mean FVC was 2.93 ± .73
litres in the non-pregnant state but decreased significantly as
pregnancy progressed to 2.55± .51 litres in the 3rd trimester. The
percentage predicted also decreased significantly from 100.70±
31.11% in the non-pregnant state to 82.30± 19.01 % in the 3ird
trimester (P=0.000). The mean FEV1 was 2.55±0.62 litres per
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second in the non-pregnant state but decreased significantly, as
pregnancy progressed to 2.24±0.45 litres/second in the 3rd
trimester. Furthermore, the percentage predicted decreased
significantly from 102.02± 30.70 31.11% in the non-pregnant state
to 82.89±18.32 % in the 3rd trimester (P=0.000). The mean PEFR
was 5.38±1.44 litres in the non pregnant state but decreased non
significantly as pregnancy progressed to 5.18± 1.42 litres in the
3rd trimester (P=0.883). However, the percentage predicted
decreased significantly from 93.4 ± 32.16 % in the non pregnant
state to 79.39 ± 20.90 % in the 3rd trimester (P=0.014). The mean
FEV1/FVC was 87.56± 2.87 % in the non-pregnant state but
increased significantly, as pregnancy progressed to 91.30± 1.91 %
in the 3rd trimester. The percentage predicted was 107.37 ± 3.88
% in the non pregnant state, 102.97 ± 1.24 % in the 1st trimester,
109.56 ± 5.33 % in the second trimester and 105.77 ± 5.82% the
3rd trimester ( P=0.000). The FVC and the percentage predicted
and the FEV1 and the percentage predicted were within normal
range in the non-pregnant and during pregnancy. However, the
values decreased significantly, as pregnancy progressed. The
decrease in FEV1 during pregnancy is not of same magnitude as the
decrease in FVC. Consequently, the FEV1/FVC ratio increased, It
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can therefore be said that physiological restriction occurs during
pregnancy.
NWAGHA, U (2021). Pregnancy- Induced Changes In Some Ventilatory Indices In Enugu, South East Nigeria. Afribary. Retrieved from https://afribary.com/works/pregnancy-induced-changes-in-some-ventilatory-indices-in-enugu-south-east-nigeria
NWAGHA, UCHENNA "Pregnancy- Induced Changes In Some Ventilatory Indices In Enugu, South East Nigeria" Afribary. Afribary, 06 May. 2021, https://afribary.com/works/pregnancy-induced-changes-in-some-ventilatory-indices-in-enugu-south-east-nigeria. Accessed 21 Nov. 2024.
NWAGHA, UCHENNA . "Pregnancy- Induced Changes In Some Ventilatory Indices In Enugu, South East Nigeria". Afribary, Afribary, 06 May. 2021. Web. 21 Nov. 2024. < https://afribary.com/works/pregnancy-induced-changes-in-some-ventilatory-indices-in-enugu-south-east-nigeria >.
NWAGHA, UCHENNA . "Pregnancy- Induced Changes In Some Ventilatory Indices In Enugu, South East Nigeria" Afribary (2021). Accessed November 21, 2024. https://afribary.com/works/pregnancy-induced-changes-in-some-ventilatory-indices-in-enugu-south-east-nigeria