Lecture 55 -- PFTs (obstruction vs restriction) Flashcards
What can be measured by Spirometry ?
what is not measured by spirometry?
○ FVC = Vital Capacity = IRV + TV + ERV
○ Resting Tidal Volume
○ FEV 1
○ FEV 1/ FVC
does not measure: TLC, FRC, RV
what defines obstruction disease of lower airways?
○ Flattened Volume time curve
○ Scooped out expiratory limb of flow
○ Low FEV1/FVC
○ Low FEV1
How is severity of Obstruction measured?
Compare to predicted value of FEV1
§ Normal -- > or equal to 80% of predicted value § Mild -- 65 to 80 % of predicted § Moderate -- 50 to 65% Severe -- < 50%
How do you determine if obstruction is reversible ?
Bronchodilator Responsiveness
○ Give patient Albuterol and repeat PFTs
§ If FEV1 or FVC improve by 200 mL or 12% improvement above the baseline
How is restrictive lower airway disease defined?
what is the defining characteristic that is not seen on spirometry?
Low FVC on T/V graph
narrow expiratory arm on F/V graph
normal or high FEV1/FVC
Not seen on spirometry – low TLC
how is severity of restrictive airway disease determined?
§ Compared FVC to the predicted values
not FEV 1; which is for obstruction
what is a fixed upper airway obstruction? what does the FV graph look like
• Intra or Extra Thoracic upper airway lesion, but cannot determine the location bc the lesion is fixed; will not change size in the response to pressure changes
both inspiratory and expiratory limbs are blunted
• Variable Intra Upper Airway Obstruction
- describe it?
- what does the graph look like
- Tracheal mass – moves with breathing
- Mass moves out of the way on inspiration due to negative pressure
- Mass occludes on exhalation due to positive pressure
- Blunted expiratory limb; normal inspiratory limb
• Variable Extrathroacic Upper Airway Obstruction
- Above the thoracic inlet (vocal cords)
- Abnormal inhalation due to obstruction with the vocal cords (floppy vocal cords obstruction with negative pressure?)
Normal expiatory; stenting open positive pressure