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Lung Function Testing in School-Age Children

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Lung Function Testing in School-Age Children Paul Aurora Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children, & Institute of Child Health, London Structure of talk Why bother? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lung Function Testing in School-Age Children


1
Lung Function Testingin School-Age Children
  • Paul Aurora
  • Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children,
  • Institute of Child Health,
  • London

2
Structure of talk
  • Why bother?
  • What do we need from a lung function test?
  • What tests are available?
  • Spirometry
  • Other tests

3
Why bother?
  • LFTs aid diagnosis and prognosis, so are of
    benefit clinically and epidemiologically
  • Early identification of lung disease allows
    monitoring of progression
  • LFTs can be used as outcome measures to evaluate
    interventions

4
What is the test for?
  • For the researcher, lung function tests need to
    show differences between groups, at
    cross-section, and over time or with
    interventions
  • For the clinician, lung function tests need to
    discriminate between individuals, or to monitor
    change in an individual over time or with
    intervention

5
Airway function in infants with CF vs prospective
healthy controls
Ranganathan et al Lancet 2001 AJRCCM 2002
Average reduction of 22 in FEV0.5 in infants
with CF vs healthy infants after adjustment
for body size, age, sex etc
USA healthy London CF London healthy
6
So, what do we need to know first?
  • Precision usually expressed as coefficient of
    variation
  • Variability/repeatability
  • Between subjects
  • Within subject, between occasions
  • Reference data
  • Standardisation

7
Between occasion repeatability
Intervention
Outcome
2
1
Time
8
Between occasion repeatability
Chan E, Thorax. 2003 Apr58(4)344-7.
9
Accurate anthropometry essential for meaningful
interpretation of results
How often do you calibrate your stadiometer?
10
Quality control
  • Study by Arets et al (ERJ 2001) reported
    spirometry in 446 school-age children who were
    experienced in the test
  • Only 60 met ATS and ERS adult criteria for start
    of test
  • Only 15 met the criterion for forced expired
    time
  • Only 80 met the criteria for reproducibility
  • Conclusion adult QC criteria are not
    appropriate for children

11
Commonly used techniques
  • Spirometry
  • tells you about airflow limitation and lung
    volumes
  • Plethysmography
  • tells you about airway resistance, total lung
    size, and trapped gas
  • Transfer factor
  • Tells you about alveolar function (also affected
    by pulmonary blood supply VQ matching)

12
Less commonly used techniques
  • Gas washout tests
  • Tell you about gas mixing (small airway function,
    heterogenous changes in compliance)
  • Interrupter resistance (Rint)
  • Tells you about airway resistance
  • Oscillometry
  • possibly tells you about small airways

13
Diagnosing asthma
  • Change in lung function
  • After bronchodilator
  • After bronchoconstriction (exercise, dry air,
    methacholine)
  • Commonly use spirometry as outcome measure, but
    can use any airway test (eg airway resistance,
    gas washout)

14
Airway inflammation
  • Exhaled NO
  • Exhaled breath condensate
  • Induced sputum

15
Exercise tests
  • Maximal tests (eg bicycle ergometer)
  • Monitor VO2, VCO2, lactate production etc
  • Submaximal tests (6-min walk, 3-min step,
    shuttle)
  • Monitor walk distance, SpO2, HR, breathlessness
    scores

16
Other specialised tests
  • Fitness to fly (ask child to breath 15 O2,
    monitor SpO2)
  • Skin allergen testing (skin prick, skin patch)

17
Spirometry
18
What is a forced expiratory manoeuvre?
  • Breathe in to desired volume
  • exhale as fast as possible to RV
  • volume-time or flow-volume plots
  • easy for adults and children gt 6, difficult for
    younger children, infants need assistance

19
What is measured from forced expiration?
  • Volume-time
  • Timed expired volumes, FEVt
  • MEF75-25
  • Flow-Volume
  • PEF
  • Flow at fixed volumes, MEF

20
Flow-volume and volume-time plots
FEV1
21
Forced Expiratory Flow-Volume Curve
12
PEF
9
MEF75
6
Flow (L.s-1)
MEF50
3
MEF25
0
100TLC
25
75
50
0RV
Expired Vital Capacity ()
22
What does the flow-volume curve tell you?
  • Flow-volume curves
  • maximal (MEFV) from TLC
  • partial (PEFV) from lower volume
  • slope of descending limb
  • inverse of time-constant of emptying
  • shape conveys information

23
Why measure forced expiration?
  • Expiratory flow-limitation is achieved with
    reasonable effort during forced expiration

24
Expiratory flow limitation
  • Once a certain minimum effort has been exceeded,
    maximum expiratory flow becomes independent of
    the effort applied
  • the maximum flow is thought to reflect the
    mechanical properties of the lungs and airways

25
Demonstrating flow-limitation Isovolume
pressure-flow curves
  • Series of forced expirations at different lung
    volumes
  • Driving pressure must be measured

26
Demonstrating flow-limitation
75 TLC
50 TLC
25 TLC
27
Demonstrating flow-limitation
28
Demonstrating flow-limitation
75 TLC
50 TLC
25 TLC
29
Demonstrating flow-limitation
  • Isovolume pressure-flow curves
  • Increasing driving pressure
  • overlay curves
  • adding an oscillating pressure to jacket pressure
    during squeeze
  • applying negative pressure

30
NEP Equipment for assessing flow limitation
during RVRTC Jones et al 2000
31
NEP to assess flow limitation - Jones et al
AJRCCM 2000
Flow limitation achieved
No Flow limitation
32
Theories to explain flow limitation
  • Equal pressure point (Mead et al. 1967)
  • Starling resistor (Pride et al. 1967)
  • Wave speed theory (Dawson et al. 1977)

33
Spirometry in infants
34
  • Choose appropriate game
  • Set appropriate target
  • Allow sufficient trials

35
Body Plethysmography
36
Body plethysmography
  • Airway resistance calculated from the
    relationship between pressure difference and flow
  • Total lung volume can be calculated by breathing
    against an occlusion

37
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38
Multiple-breath washout
  • Tidal breathing test
  • The resident gas of the lung is washed-out
    using air (eg SF6 or He washout), or oxygen
    (nitrogen washout)
  • The ventilation required to dilute the resident
    gas is a measure of (small) airway function

39
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40
  • A Wash-in phase
  • B Disconnection
  • C Washout

41
Interrupter technique theory
  • Based on assumption that change in transpulmonary
    pressure observed immediately after sudden
    occlusion of airway is entirely explained by
    cessation of flow
  • Respiratory system resistance (Rrs) then
    calculated from change in pressure (Prs) and flow
    preceding occlusion
  • Assumes that pressure measured at mouth
    equilibrates along airways immediately after
    occlusion
  • Can now be measured by inexpensive portable device

42
The interrupter technique
43
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44
Impulse oscillation / Forced oscillation theory
  • The mechanical characteristics of a system may be
    calculated by relating the applied stress to the
    resultant deformation
  • During breathing, pressure is generated by the
    respiratory muscles to produce deformation of the
    lung
  • If transpulmonary pressure is varied in a
    frequency domain different from that of
    respiratory muscle activity, we can study
    mechanics related to the applied transpulmonary
    pressure

45
Impulse oscillation technique
  • Signal of 6Hz or greater generated by computer,
    delivered through one or more loudspeakers placed
    at the mouth, at the chest or via a headbox
    (headbox aims to reduce upper airway artefact)
  • Measure angular velocity and frequency of applied
    pressure and resultant flow. From this can
    calculate the mechanical impedance of the
    respiratory system
  • (Zrs, Prs / Vrs)
  • Pressure and flow are normally measured at same
    point (input impedance, Zrs,in)

46
Forced Oscillation Technique
standard generator
head generator to minimize upper airway
artefact
47
Nitric Oxide levels within the airway
  • NO formed in upper lower respiratory tract
  • Diffusion into lumen conditions exhaled gas with
    NO
  • Alveolar NO is very low as NO taken up by
    haemoglobin in pulmonary capillaries
  • Nasal NO is high and may contaminate exhaled
    samples
  • Ambient NO may be very high. Measurement
    technique needs to prevent contamination of
    exhaled sample

48
Inhale (NO free air)
  • Exhale to RV
  • Inhale to TLC over 2-3s
  • No nose clip (unless subject cannot avoid nasal
    inspiration)Inspired air passes through a
    scrubber to eliminate ambient NO recommend
    FINO lt 5 ppb

49
Exhaled NO signal profiles
  • Flow 45-55 ml/sduration gt 6s
  • NO profile- washout phase- transition-
    plateau lasting gt3s ?NO lt 10 or if NO
    lt5ppb, ?NO lt 1ppb
  • Pressure 5-20 cmH2O.
  • Allow gt 30s quiet breathing between tests
  • Repeatability ? 2 tests with NO plateau within
    10 of the mean

50
Offline exhaled NO circuit
51
Key points
  • Spirometry still the mainstay of the lung
    function lab, but
  • Other tests may be more sensitive
  • It may be possible to measure inflammation
    non-invasively

52
Key points
  • Whatever test you use, remember
  • What is the test for?
  • What is precision, variability?
  • Quality control is essential
  • What are your reference data?
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