Lung Function Testing Flashcards
What is the purpose of lung function testing?
- evaluation of breathless patient
- screening for COPD/occupational lung disease
- lung cancer (fitness for treatment)
- pre-operative assessment
- measure disease progression/treatment response
- monitoring drug treatment toxic to lungs
- pulmonary complications of systemic disease
Explain how spirometry is carried out
- patient takes big breath in as far as they can and then blow it out as hard as they can for as long as possible then take another breath all the way in
- forced expiratory manoeuvre from total lung capacity followed by full inspiration
- best of 3
What are the disadvantages of spirometry?
- needs an appropriately trained technician
- effort and technique dependent
- if patient is frail they might not be able to do it
- same if patient is in pain/too unwell
What can be directly measured in spirometry?
- vital capacity (total amount exhaled after maximal inspiration)
- inspirational capacity (total volume of air that the lungs can accomodate)
- inspiratory reserve volume (amount of air that can be inhaled after maximal expiration)
- tidal volume (the volume of air that moves in and out of the lungs with each respiratory cycle)
- expiratory reserve volume (volume of air that can be expired after normal expiration)
How much air is released in expiration in a second normally?
3L = 75% FEV1/FVC ratio
Describe the features of obstructive lung disease
- asthma or COPD
- FEV1/FVC <70%
- severity of COPD stratified by %predicted FEV1
- mild >80%
- moderate 50-80%
- severe 30-50%
- very severe <30%
Describe reversibility testing in asthma
- nebulised or inhaled salbutamol given
- spirometry taken before and 15 minutes after
- if 15% and 400ml reversibility in in FEV1 = asthma
What testing can be done for asthma?
- peak flow (look for diurnal variation, response to inhaled corticosteroids, occupational asthma)
- reversibility testing with spirometry
- bronchial provocation
Describe the features of restrictive lung disease
- FEV1 and FVC reduced
- FEV1/FVC <70%
What are the causes of restrictive lung disease?
- interstitial lung disease (stiff lungs)
- kyphoscoliosis/chest wall abnormality
- previous pneumonectomy
- neuromuscular disease
- obesity
- poor effort/technique
How can you measure gas exchange in the lungs?
- transfer factor (TLCO, KCO, DLCO)
- single breath of very small concentration of CO
- CO has very high affinity for Hb
- measure concentration in expired gas to derive uptake in lungs
What factors affect transfer factor uptake in the lungs?
- alveolar surface area
- pulmonary capillary blood volume
- Hb concentration
- ventilation perfusion mis-match
What conditions cause a reduction in transfer factor uptake?
- emphysema
- interstitial lung disease
- pulmonary vascular disease
- anaemia
What are the 2 ways of measuring lung volume?
- helium dilution: inspire known quantity of inert gas
- body plethysmography: respiratory manoevures in a sealed box causes changes in air pressure which can be measured
What is oximetry?
- non-invasive measurement of saturation of Hb by O2
- depends on oxyhaemoglobin and deoxyhaemoglobin absorbing infrared light differently
- depends on adequate perfusion (eg. Compromised in shock/cardiac failure)
- at a pressure of 12-13 O2kPa 99% RBC bound to O2 so level of O2 will have no effect on carrying capacity