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1.
Eur Respir J ; 9(8): 1747-50, 1996 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8866604

ABSTRACT

Specific airway resistance (sRaw) measured by body plethysmography has been shown to decrease markedly with decreasing breathing frequency when the inspired air is not conditioned to body temperature, atmospheric pressure and saturation with water vapour (BTPS). The phenomenon has been attributed to noninstantaneous gas warming and wetting in the airways. The aim of this investigation was to assess whether the phenomenon was also present in a commercialized plethysmograph featuring an "electronic BTPS correction". Airway resistance (Raw) and sRaw were measured in 15 healthy subjects at six breathing frequencies ranging 0.25-3 Hz, using a constant volume plethysmograph in which a correction for non-BTPS gas conditions was applied by electronically flattening the box pressure-airway flow loop (Jaeger Masterscreen Body, version 4.0). The temperature and water vapour saturations in the box averaged 26.5 +/- 1.3 degrees C and 59 +/- 6%, respectively. Raw and sRaw exhibited a clear positive frequency dependence in all but one subject. From 0.25 to 3 Hz Raw increased from (mean+/-SD) 0.62 +/- 0.55 to 1.71 +/- 0.76 hPa x s x L-1 (p<0.001), and sRaw from 2.34 +/- 1.90 to 7.55 +/- 3.08 hPa x s (p<0.001). The data are consistent with a simple model, in which gas conditioning in the airways and external dead space occurred with a time constant of 0.39 s. We conclude that the electronic BTPS correction of the instrument was inadequate, probably because it is assumed that gas conditioning in the airways is instantaneous. We recommend that, with similar instruments, airway resistance be measured using as high a panting frequency as feasible.


Subject(s)
Plethysmography , Pulmonary Gas Exchange , Adult , Airway Resistance/physiology , Equipment Safety , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Plethysmography/methods
2.
J Appl Physiol (1985) ; 80(6): 2198-203, 1996 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8806930

ABSTRACT

Specific airway resistance (sRaw) measured by body plethysmography without conditioning of the inspired air to BTPS exhibits a strong frequency dependence related to the fact that the warming and wetting of the gas in the airways is not instantaneous (R. Peslin, C. Duvivier, M. Vassiliou, and C. Gallina. J. Appl. Physiol. 79: 1958-1965, 1995). We have tested three methods in 21 healthy subjects to correct for that artifact by using a simple model, assuming a first-order thermal process characterized by a single time constant. The corrections required entering an assumed constant value for (methods 1 and 2) and/or for airway inertance (methods 1 and 3) and/or measuring the inspired gas temperature and water vapor saturation (methods 2 and 3). The frequency dependence of sRaw was measured from 0.5 to 3 Hz both with (sRawETPS) and without (sRawam) gas conditioning. With optimal values for and/or airway inertance, the mean difference between sRawam and sRawETPS was close to zero with all three methods, but the root mean square difference was significantly lower with method 2 (0.83 +/- 0.35 hPa.s compared with 1.21 +/- 0.54 and 1.20 +/- 0.49 hPa.s with methods 1 and 2, respectively). We conclude that the thermal artifact of sRaw measurements may be best corrected by using temperature measurements and an assumed time constant (0.152 s with our equipment).


Subject(s)
Airway Resistance/physiology , Plethysmography/methods , Respiratory Function Tests/methods , Adult , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged
3.
Rev Mal Respir ; 4(3): 121-5, 1987.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2956648

ABSTRACT

Two mini-peak flow meters, the Airmed (mini-Wright) and the Medicheck (Pulmonary Monitor), were assessed against a reference electronic spirometer (Spiromatic, based on a pneumotachograph, integrator and an Apple II computer) in a series of 10 healthy subjects and 20 patients with chronic obstructive lung disease. The devices to be tested were mounted in series with the reference instrument; each subject did five trials. It was found that the Airmed instrument overestimated the flows up to 9 l X s-1 (i.e. in patients, average difference 0.86 l X s-1, p less than 0.001; in healthy subjects, average difference 0.35 l X s-1, p less than 0.001). The correlation with the results of the reference instrument was high (r = 0.992) in healthy subjects, whose regression slope was less than unity (0.763). In patients the correlation was satisfactory (r = 0.974), and the slope close to 1 (1.05). The Medicheck overestimated slightly the results of patients (difference 0.17 l X s-1, p less than 0.01); in normal subjects the overestimation was present only below 10 l X s-1 and the difference with the reference instrument nonsignificant (average 0.19 l X s-1). The results were closely related to those of the reference spirometer in both healthy subjects (r = 0.960) and patients (r = 0.936). As for the first instrument the slope of the regression was below 1 in healthy subjects (0.751) and practically one (1.01) in patients.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Subject(s)
Lung Diseases, Obstructive/physiopathology , Pulmonary Ventilation , Rheology , Adult , Aged , Evaluation Studies as Topic , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Respiratory Function Tests/instrumentation , Spirometry/instrumentation
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