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Pulmonary Function Testing

Hawa Edriss MDa, Gilbert Berdine MDb

Correspondence to Hawa Edriss MD. Email: hawa.edriss@ttuhsc.edu

+ Author Affiliation - Author Affiliation
aA resident in Internal Medicine at TTUHSC in Lubbock, TX.
bA pulmonary physician in the Department of Internal Medicine at TTUHSC in Lubbock, TX.

SWRCCC 2014;2(6):56-60 
doi: 10.12746/swrccc2014.0206.081

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The term PFT encompasses three different measures of lung function: spirometry, lung volumes, and diffusion capacity. In this article we will discuss spirometry which is the most commonly performed PFT. It measures the exhaled volume of air against time. Fast and cheap, it takes 15 minutes or less to perform testing.1

1. Indications

Spirometry is useful in diagnosing and monitoring respiratory diseases, including asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), various diffuse parenchymal lung diseases, and neuromuscular disorders (Table1).2

Table 1

Evaluate respiratory symptomsor radiographic findings

Assist in diagnosis of respiratory diseases

Monitor respiratory disease progression and response to therapy

Evaluate risk prior to lung surgery

Evaluate the pulmonary effects of occupational, environmental, and toxic exposures

Assess impairment or disability

Assist in determining  disease prognosis

Assist in smoking cessation efforts

2. Spirometry Measurements

The most important measurements are the forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1) and the forced vital capacity (FVC). The FEV1 measures the amount of air exhaled during the first second of a forced exhalation. The FVC measures the total volume of air forcefully exhaled after a maximal inspiration. All measurements are made at ambient pressure saturated with water vapor and at body temperature (37°C) (BTPS).1 Both FVC and FEV1 are reported in liters. A decrease in FVC or FEV1 indicates impairment in ventilatory capacity. Eighty percent of predicted is considered to be the lower limit of normal.

Other measurements can be extracted from the FVC maneuvers, including the mean forced expiratory flow between 25% and 75% of the FVC (FEF 25%–75%) and the peak expiratory flow (PEF), which is the maximum flow achieved during forced exhalation. Both are measured in liters per second.2 The FEF 25%-75% is also known as the mid flow. The PEF is helpful to ascertain whether the effort was maximal. A PEF as percentage of predicted should be at least as high as the lesser of the FVC and FEV1 as percentage of predicted. A lower than expected PEF can be due to neuromuscular weakness, central airflow obstruction, or – most commonly – submaximal effort.

Changes in FEF 25%–75% reflect changes in small airways; its reduction is associated with small airway dysfunction. However, the FEF 25%–75% is a highly variable test that is dependent on exhalation time and is not specific for small airway disease in individual patients.3 The PEF reflects the caliber of the large airways and is highly effort dependent. Although PEF can be measured using inexpensive devices, it is a more variable measurement than the FEV1, and the correlation between PEF and FEV1 in patients with airway obstruction is poor.4 Neither the FEF 25%– 75% nor the PEF offers any advantage over FEV1.4,5

3. Spirometry Performance

Before performing a PFT, a clear explanation of the test is necessary for optimal patient performance:

Technique

The best overall result is obtained when the patient gives a maximal effort. After several normal (tidal) breaths, the patient is instructed to take a maximal inspiration to total lung capacity (TLC), and then the patient is instructed to forcefully exhale as hard, as fast, and as long as possible (5- 6 seconds). See Figure 1. In older patients at least 6 seconds may be needed to obtain an adequate result. When the exhalation has been satisfactorily completed, the patient is instructed to forcefully inhale back to TLC in order to complete the maneuver and close the loop.

The test should be repeated three times. A minimum of three and a maximum of eight maneuvers are performed until three acceptable curves are obtained. Two or three maneuvers that have values within a 5% difference of each other indicate reproducibility.


Figure 2

Figure 1A: Normal flow-volume loop (clinical files-G Berdine MD)


Figure 2

Figure 1B: Flow-volume loop in a patient with COPD (clinical files-G Berdine MD)


4. PFT interpretation

Assessment of test acceptability, reproducibility, repeatability, and integration with the patient’s presentation are essential for PFT interpretation. The American Thoracic Society/European Respiratory Society (ATS/ERS) Task Force on Standardization of Lung Function Testing provides clear guidelines for assessing test acceptability and repeatability6Criteria are listed below.

The test should be started with a sharp take-off with no hesitation with an extrapolated volume < 5% or 0.15 L. A question that needs to be answered during testing is: Are the two largest values of FVC and FEV1 within 0.15 L of each other?

Good test criteria are a complete exhalation to RV, plateau on volume-time curve, and exhalation time ≥ 6 seconds (3 sec for children), and no artifacts, such as coughing, glottis closure, hesitation, and obstructed mouthpiece.

If the above criteria are not met, continue testing until criteria are met, a maximum of eight tests have been performed, or the patient is fatigued.

Interpretation of spirometry using the FVC, FEV1, and FEV1/FVC ratio can be categorized into three common patterns: normal, airflow obstruction, or a suggestion of restriction. While obstruction is defined based on spirometry alone, restriction requires lung volume measurements by helium dilution or body plethysmography for diagnosis.

Interpretation should begin with the shape of the flow volume loop. A normal loop (Figure 1-A) looks like a child’s drawing of a sailboat. The expiratory limb is the triangular sail and should have a sharp peak and near straight line descent. The inspiratory limb is the rounded hull with maximal flow in the middle of inspiration.

Airflow obstruction is defined as a reduction in FEV1 out of proportion to the reduction in FVC. This can be determined graphically as a “sagging sail” in the flow volume loop (Figure 1-B) or numerically as a reduced FEV1/FVC. Note that FEV1/FVC is a ratio and has no units. Although a reduced FEV1/FVC defines obstruction, the severity of the obstruction is based on the degree of impairment in FEV1.

The term reduced or low FEV1/FVC is not used consistently. The ATS/ERS defines an obstructive ventilatory defect as a FEV1/FVC ratio below the 5th percentile of the predicted value, a statistically defined lower limit of normal (LLN).8 The Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) defines airway obstruction as a post-bronchodilator FEV1/FVC ratio less than 70%.9 Both approaches use the FEV1 percent predicted to grade the severity of airway obstruction (Table 2).

Table 2

            Definition of obstruction and classification of severity by spirometry

ATS/ERS

FEV1/FVC<LLN

 FEV1% predicted

 

GOLD

FEV1/FVC<0.70

 FEV1%predicted

 

>70 Mild

Stage I: Mild >80

60-69 Moderate

Stage II: Moderate <80

50-59 Moderately severe

Stage III: Severe <50

  35-49 Severe

Stage IV: Very severe <30

<35   Very severe

 



Some individuals have FEV1/FVC ratio reduced but preserved FEV1 (i.e., greater than 100% of predicted). Patients with this pattern have been identified as obstructed or a “normal” physiologic variant.8 Clinical correlation here is important. In healthy individuals this may represent unequal growth of the airways. However, in people with symptoms this result may indicate obstruction.

Aging and loss of elastic recoil lead to reduction in FEV1 more rapidly than FVC, resulting in a progressive reduction in the FEV1/FVC ratio. The GOLD uses a fixed ratio for FEV1/FVC for simplicity of inclusion criteria into studies. However, this may result in the over diagnosis of COPD in the elderly and the under diagnosis of COPD in the young.

A restrictive ventilatory defect is defined as a total lung capacity (TLC) below the 5th percentile of the predicted value. The best methods to measure lung volumes include plethysmography, inert gas, or nitrogen washout methods.

However, restrictive defects are suggested by a reduction in FVC with a normal value for FEV1/FVC. Patients with interstitial lung disease have stiff lungs and often demonstrate higher than normal values for FEV1/FVC. In extreme cases, the exhalation will be complete in less than 1 second and the FEV1 and FVC will be identical. Spirometry can exclude restrictive defects with accuracy greater than 95% if the FVC is normal.9 Patients who have spirometry suggestive of restriction should have lung volumes measured to confirm the restriction.

Many patients do not fall neatly into any of the categories. These patients have ventilatory impairment based on reduced FVC and/or FEV1, but they do not meet the criteria for either obstruction or restriction. Some patients meet criteria for both obstruction and restriction. Mixed defects with apical emphysema and basilar fibrosis should be considered in these cases. Chest wall problems due to skeletal abnormalities or obesity should also be considered.

The following factors should be considered during PFT interpretation


5. NormalUS reference values

Equations for predicted (normal) values have been developed for FVC and FEV1. The equations were originally obtained by linear regression of measured values for FVC and FEV1 against age and height in normal healthy subjects.9 The general form of the equation is:

Lung function parameter = a + b*height + c*age.

The regressions were valid only for adults. The coefficient for height (b) is a positive number since FVC and FEV1 increase in larger subjects, and the coefficient for age (c) is a negative number since FVC and FEV1 decrease with age. Different coefficients were obtained for men and women. Subsequent efforts separated subjects by race.

It is well known that both FVC and FEV1 decrease faster with age in older patients. Hankinson et al modelled FVC and FEV1 to a 2nd order polynomial in order to capture this curvature.10 They recorded spirometric reference values in 1999 for 7,429 asymptomatic, nonsmoking Caucasians, African-Americans, and Mexican-Americans, eight to 80 years of age in the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III). These spirometry examinations followed the 1987 American Thoracic Society recommendations.

The general form of the reference equation is:

Lung function parameter = b0 + b1 * age + b2 * age2 + b3 * height2

They concluded that both male and female Mexican-Americans and African-Americans have lower FEV1 values than do Caucasians for all age groups. When adjusted for height, only the African- Americans have lower FEV1 values. The lower FEV1 values observed in Mexican-Americans were due to their shorter heights compared with Caucasian participants of similar age.

African-Americans have FEV1 values lower than both Caucasians and Mexican-Americans even though they have similar heights for age. These differences may be due to a difference in body build; African-Americans in general have a smaller trunk: leg ratio.10

Examples

1. 25-year-old Caucasian man 6 feet tall (183 cm)

FVC= (-) 0.1933+0.00064 * 25 + (-) 0.000269 *252 + 0.00018642 * 1832 = 6.04 L

2. 25-year-old Caucasian woman 5 feet 2 inches tall (157.5 cm)

FVC= (-) 0.3560 + 0.01870 * 25 + (-) 0.000382 * 252 + 0.00014815 * 157.32 = 3.54 L

References

  1. Marciniuk DD. ACCP Pulmonary Medicine Board Review: 26th edition.
  2. Mason RJ, Broaddus VC, et al. Murray and Nadel’s Textbook of Respiratory Medicine, Fifth Edition. Chapter 24, 522-553.
  3. McFadden ER, Linden DA. A reduction in maximum mid-expiratory flow rate. A spirographic manifestation of small airway disease. Am J Med 1972; 52: 725-73.
  4. Brusasco V, Crapo R, Viegi G, et al. Coming together: The ATS/ERS consensus on clinical pulmonary function testing. Eur Respir J 2005; 26: 1-2.
  5. Hegewald MJ, Lefor MJ, Jensen RL, et al. Peak expiratory flow is not a quality indicator for spirometry: Peak expiratory flow variability and FEV 1 are poorly correlated in an elderly population. Chest 2007; 131: 1494-1499.
  6. Miller MR, Hankinson J, Brusasco V, et al. Standardization of spirometry. Eur Respir J 2005; 26: 319-338.
  7. Pfenninger JL, Fowler GC. Pfenninger and Fowler’s Procedures for Primary Care, Third Edition, chapter 91, 599-605© 2011, 2003, 1994 by Mosby, Inc, an affiliate of Elsevier Inc.
  8. Pellegrino R, Viegi G, Brusasco V, et al. Interpretative strategies for lung function tests. Eur Respir J. 2005 Nov; 26:948-68.
  9. http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/pftlab/predeqns.html
  10. Hankinson JL, Odencrantz JR, Fedan KB. Spirometric reference values from a sample of the general U.S. population. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1999; 159:179-87.

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Received: 3/12/2014
Accepted: 4/11/2014
Reviewers:Kenneth Nugent MD
Published electronically: 4/15/2014
Conflict of Interest Disclosures: None

 

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