| Literature DB >> 25750095 |
C-P Criée1, X Baur2, D Berdel3, D Bösch4, M Gappa3, P Haidl5, K Husemann6, R A Jörres7, H-J Kabitz8, P Kardos9, D Köhler10, H Magnussen11, R Merget12, H Mitfessel13, D Nowak7, U Ochmann7, W Schürmann14, H-J Smith15, S Sorichter16, T Voshaar17, H Worth18.
Abstract
Spirometry is a simple test and considered the gold standard in lung function. An obstructive ventilatory defect is a disproportionate reduction of maximal airflow from the lung in relation to the maximal volume that can be displaced from the lung. It implies airway narrowing and is defined by a reduced FEV1/FVC ratio below the 5th percentile of the predicted value (lower limit of normal, LLN). A restrictive disorder may be suspected when vital capacity (FVC) is reduced and FEV1/FVC is normal. It is definitely proven, however, only by a decrease in TLC below the 5th percentile of predicted value (LLN). The measurement of TLC by body plethysmography is necessary to confirm or exclude a restrictive defect or hyperinflation of the lung when FVC is below the LLN. 2012 a task force of the ERS published new reference values based on 74,187 records from healthy non-smoking males and females from 26 countries. The new reference equations for the 3-95 age range are now available that include appropriate age-dependent mean values and lower limits of normal (LLN). This presentation aims at providing the reader with recommendations dealing with standardization and interpretation of spirometry. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25750095 DOI: 10.1055/s-0034-1391345
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pneumologie ISSN: 0934-8387