Pulmonary function tests Flashcards
What is peak expiratory flow (PEF)?
- The maximal speed of airflow as the patient exhales (L/min)
- Increase in PEF value = lung function is better, decrease = wprse
- predicted values used depending on age, height and gender
What is FVC?
- The maximal amount of air (L) that the patient can forcibly exhale after taking a max inhalation
What is a spirometer?
- records the volume of air that is breathed in and out
- ## Generates tracings of air flow
What are tracings used to calculate?
- Vital capacity (Vc), Tidal volume (Vt)
- The flow rate of air movement
How do modern spirometers work?
- Use electronic method of measuring the gas inhaled/exhaled through a mouthpiece
- Vitalograph - records the volume expired during a vital capacity breath common in primary care setting
- FVC standing vs seated
- High intrathoracic pressure can result in reduced cardiac output and cerebral blood flow
- Subject is observed
What is a spirometer?
- Floating bell jar
- Expired gas passes into water seal
- Increased pressure causes jar to rise
- Movement transmitted to pen
- Pen movement proportional to volume breathed in/out
Explain what trace movements indicate?
INSPIRATION = upward deflection
EXPIRATION = downward deflection
How to calculate Inspiratory Capacity?
VT (TIDAL V) + IRV ( inspiratory reserve volume)
How to calculate functional residual capacity?
ERV + RV
What do forced flow-volume measurements show us? (FVC, FEV)
- How much air can the subject blow out (reduced in restrictive disorders)
- How fast the air is expelled
- Pattern of change in flow-volume curve can indicate site of obstruction
- Response to treatment
- Change with age or growth
- Progression of disease
What is FEV1?
- The volume exhaled in the first second
- most reproducible flow parameter. Useful in diagnosing and monitoring patients with obstructive pulmonary disorders (asthma, COPD)
What is peak expiratory flow?
- Max speed of airflow as the patient exhales
Describe volume-time graphs in obstructive disease (Asthma, COPD)
-FVC is not markedly reduced
- Narrowed airways reduces the speed at which air can be breathed out
- Fraction of air expelled during 1st sec (FEV1)- markedly reduced
- Typical pattern in obstructive airways disease :
- FVC nearly normal
- FEV1 markedly reduced
- FEV1/FVC ratio <70%
Describe Volume-time graphs in restrictive disease (lung fibrosis)
- FVC markedly reduced (lungs are stiff, cannot be expanded adequately)
- Speed at which air can be breathed out is normal (no airway narrowing)
- FEV1 is reduced but proportionally so to FV
- Typical pattern in restrictive airways disease:
- Low FVC
- Low FEV1 but proportional
- ## FEV1/FVC ratio >// 70%