What Is Restrictive Lung Disease?
Restrictive ventilatory disorders often occur in patients with no lesions in the lungs and limited thorax mobility. Pulmonary interstitial fibrosis, thoracic deformity, pleural effusion, pleural thickening, or pulmonary resection have shown chest radiographs after lung resection Copd is accompanied by emphysema. The latter is mostly atelectasis. It is literally meaning. Obstructive is because the trachea is blocked or narrowed and becomes unobstructed. Restriction is because the person is restricted and does not pass the lung function test. It can be summarized as restrictive and obstructive ventilation dysfunction, or mixed ventilation dysfunction that shows that both exist, but both can cause reduced lung capacity. Causes: This is mainly seen in: inflammation of the lung tissue, fibrosis, tumors, thorax Fluid accumulation, which causes compression, collapse, or replacement of normal lung tissue by lesions; bronchial asthma, obstructive emphysema, or poorly shunted lung cysts, causing expiratory air retention; rheumatoid spondylitis , Polio, scoliosis and other diseases that cause limited thorax activity.
Restrictive ventilation disorder
- Restrictive ventilatory disorders often occur in patients with no lesions in the lungs and limited thorax mobility. Pulmonary interstitial fibrosis, thoracic deformity, pleural effusion, pleural thickening, or pulmonary resection have shown chest radiographs after lung resection Copd is accompanied by emphysema. The latter is mostly atelectasis. It is literally meaning. Obstructive is because the trachea is blocked or narrowed and becomes unobstructed. Restriction is because the person is restricted and does not pass the lung function test. It can be summarized as restrictive and obstructive ventilation dysfunction, or mixed ventilation dysfunction that shows that both exist, but both can cause reduced lung capacity. Causes: This is mainly seen in: inflammation of the lung tissue, fibrosis, tumors, thorax Fluid accumulation, which causes compression, collapse, or replacement of normal lung tissue by lesions; bronchial asthma, obstructive emphysema, or poorly shunted lung cysts, causing expiratory air retention; rheumatoid spondylitis , Polio, scoliosis and other diseases that cause limited thorax activity.