Lab 3: Pulmonary Function Flashcards
Classification of Lung Defects
Obstructive lung defects are characterized by difficulty exhaling all the air from the lungs due to narrowed airways,
Restrictive lung defects involve reduced lung expansion and decreased lung volume, caused by stiff lung tissue or chest wall abnormalities, as seen in conditions like pulmonary fibrosis and scoliosis.
NORMAL SPIROGRAM
What is Forced (FVC)?
What is Slow (FVC)?
- Forced (FVC)
– Requires proper coaching
– Three distinct phases
– Decreased in both obstructive and restrictive diseases
– Typically 4-5 L in males, 3-4 L in females - Slow (SVC)
– Helps avoid air trapping
Slow Vital Capacity
What is FEV1?
- Maximal volume exhaled during the first second of expiration
- Best indicator of obstructive lung disease
- Flow characteristics of the larger airways
- Best expressed as a percentage of the FVC
(FEV1/FVC)
– Should be able to exhale 70% of the vital capacity in the first second
– Decreased in obstructive disorders
Flow Volume Loops
Flow Volume Loops
Forced Expiratory Flow
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Peak Expiratory Flow Rate (PEFR)
- Maximum flow rate achieved during an FVC
- Used in asthmatics to identify the severity of airway obstruction and guide therapy
- Dependent on patient effort
- Normal value is 10L/sec (600L/min), decreases with age and obstruction
Maximum Voluntary Ventilation (MVV)
- MVV – patient breathes as fast and deep as possible for 12-15 seconds
- Tests for overall lung function, ventilatory reserve capacity and air trapping
- Normal = 170L/min
- Decreased in obstructive disorders
Exercise Induced Bronchospasm (EIB)
- Acute narrowing of the airways during and after exercise
- Normal lungs vs EIB obstructed lungs can have a similar FVC, but FEV1 will be affected
- Defined as ≥ 10% drop in FEV1 after exercise compared to rest
Bronchodilators
Bronchodilators are medications that relax the muscles around the airways, widening the air passages and making it easier to breathe, commonly used to treat conditions like asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).slide 27
Nitrogen Washout
- Open circuit method
- Patient breathes 100% oxygen while the nitrogen washed out of the lungs is measured
- Assumes 79% of lung volume is nitrogen
- Several “problems” with this test
Helium Dilution
- Closed system
- Known volume and concentration of He added and it will be diluted in proportion to the size of the lung volume