Alveolar deadspace and intrapulmonary shunt in healthy individuals and in individuals who have recovered from COVID-19 infection.
Sandhu D., Magor-Elliott SRM., Petousi N., Talbot NP., Bennett AN., Holdsworth DA., Ritchie GAD., Robbins PA.
Following acute COVID-19 infection, unvaccinated patients have been reported to exhibit elevated alveolar deadspace (̇VD,alv/̇VT) and intrapulmonary shunt (̇Qs/̇QT) fractions. However, as there is uncertainty surrounding the upper limits of normal for ̇VD,alv/̇VT and ̇Qs/̇QT, we sought to replicate the findings from a separate, previously reported cohort of COVID-19 patients that also included a healthy control group never infected with COVID-19. Data from 81 participants, classified into four different groups based on the severity of prior COVID-19 infection, were used. All participants had arterial blood-gas samples drawn while highly precise measurements of their respiratory gas exchange were made. The gas exchange data were used to estimate alveolar P C O 2 ${P_{{\mathrm{C}}{{\mathrm{O}}_2}}}$ and P O 2 ${P_{{{\mathrm{O}}_2}}}$ , and the differences between these values and the corresponding arterial blood-gas values provided the alveolar-arterial gradients from which ̇VD,alv/̇VT and ̇Qs/̇QT were calculated. Mean ̇VD,alv/̇VT was 0.115 ± 0.062 and mean ̇Qs/̇QT was 0.014 ± 0.011. No significant differences between the groups, including the uninfected control group, were detected for either ̇VD,alv/̇VT or ̇Qs/̇QT, although if severity was instead treated as an interval measure, then a small increase in ̇Qs/̇QT with severity (P = 0.00934) could be detected. Many participants, including controls, exceeded the originally proposed upper limit of normal for ̇VD,alv/̇VT, whereas no participant exceeded the originally proposed upper limit for ̇Qs/̇QT. We conclude that prior infection with COVID-19 had no effect on ̇VD,alv/̇VT and little effect on ̇Qs/̇QT, and that the supposedly high values of ̇VD,alv/̇VT are within the normal range.

