Lung Volumes and Lung Function Testing Flashcards

1
Q

What is tested in lung function testing

A

Mechanical condition of the lungs

Resistance of the airways

Diffusion across the alveolar membrane

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2
Q

How does a spirometer work and what does it measure (vaguely)

A

Breath in and out of the drum which raises and lowers as the water is displaced; a pen then tracks out the breathing pattern

It measures lung volume

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3
Q

What are all the initials

A
TLC: Total Lung Capacity
VC: Vital Capacity
TV: Tidal Volume
FRC: Forced Residual Capacity
IRV/ERV: Inspiratory/Expiratory Reserve Volume
RV: Residual Volume
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4
Q

Tidal Volume

A

Volume of air entering and leaving the lung with each normal breath (approx 0.5l)

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5
Q

Vital Capacity Volume

A

Volume of air expired out after a deep breath in and a deep breath out

(TV+IRV+ERV)

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6
Q

Inspiratory Reserve Volume

A

Extra volume of air inspired above the normal tidal volume with full force

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7
Q

Expiratory Reserve Volume (ERV)

A

Extra volume of air expired by forceful expiration at the end of normal tidal expiration

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8
Q

Residual Volume

A

Volume of air remaining in lungs after the most forceful expiration

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9
Q

Functional Residual Capacity

A

Amount of air left in lungs after normal expiration (Expiratory reserve volume + Residual Volume)

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10
Q

Total Lung Capacity

A

Maximum Volume of air the lungs can hold (Vital Capacity + Residual Volume)

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11
Q

Vitalograph

A

Device used to measure forced vital capacity (FVC) and FEV1 (Volume expired in first second, typically >70% FVC)

Tell patient to inhale very deeply, then exhale as hard and long as possible and use as much effort as possible

Usually take the best result of 3 trials

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12
Q

Helium Dilution System

A

Known concentration of helium and volume in this system

Compare system before breathing helium vs after (seeing how much volume is left inside patient post breathing air in & out)

C2 is known because we can measure it

Used to measure FRC and thus TLC/RV since spirometer cannot

YOU ARE NOT EXPECTED TO KNOW FORMULAS

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13
Q

Nitrogen Washout

A

Calculates the amount of nitrogen in lungs to reverse engineer a way to calculate total lung capacity containing O2

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14
Q

Restrictive Deficits

A

Pulmonary fibrosis and scoliosis

FVC is reduced but FEV1 is relatively normal

FEV1:FVC remains mostly normal/increased

Think that the airways are fine but lungs are compressed

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15
Q

Obstructive Deficits

A

Asthma, COPD

FEV1 is reduced but FVC mostly normal

Think that the airways are obstructed but lung capacity is not affected

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16
Q

Analyse vitalograph results

A

Red is restrictive (2.8–>3.0), orange is obstructive (3.1–>5) and yellow is normal (4.5–>5)

17
Q

PEF Rate

A

Peak Expiratory Flow Rate

Curve indicates exhalation (as hard as possible)

18
Q

Flow Volume Loops

A

Red is restrictive, orange is obstructive and yellow is normal

Note that for red, the shape is the same because the airways are normal but the proportions are affected

19
Q

Peak Flow Meter

A
20
Q

Diffusion Conductance

A