| Literature DB >> 26198284 |
Klaus Vogt1,2, Klaus-Dieter Wernecke3, Hans Behrbohm4, Wolfgang Gubisch5, Mara Argale6.
Abstract
Rhinomanometry can still be considered as the standard technique for the objective assessment of the ventilatory function of the nose. Reliable technical requirements are given by fast digital sensors and modern information technology. However, the xyimaging of the pressure-flow relation typically shows loops as a sign of hysteresis, with the need for resolution of the breath in four phases. The three pillars of 4-phase rhinomanometry (4PR) are the replacement of estimations by measurements, the introduction of parameters related to the subjective sensing of obstruction, and the graphical information regarding the disturbed function of the nasal valve. In a meta-analysis of 36,563 clinical measurements, we analyze the errors of the "classic" parameters (flow in 150 Pa) and reject the further use of these parameters as obsolete, because they correspond to an inaccurate estimation rather than proper measurement. In a pre-study of 1580 measurements, the logarithmic effective resistance (Reff) was found to have the highest correlation with values obtained from a visual analog scale. Next, we classify the inspiratory effective resistance in 20,069 measurements without treatment and 16,494 measurements after decongestion with xylometazoline 0.1 % spray in 20 % percentiles. The gradation of obstruction delivers not only "normal" values but also indications for the severity of the obstruction in adult Caucasian noses. Adoption of the distribution for the growing nose and analysis of the total nasal resistance is addressed, and typical findings of nasal valve phenomena are outlined.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical validation; Effective resistance; Four-phase rhinomanometry; Logarithmic transformation; Meta-analysis; Parameter
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26198284 PMCID: PMC4824807 DOI: 10.1007/s00405-015-3723-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol ISSN: 0937-4477 Impact factor: 2.503
Fig. 1XY diagram in four-phase rhinomanometry
Fig. 2Vertex resistance
Fig. 3Effective resistance
Descriptive statistics of 36,563 classified and non-classified measurements
The classes are corresponding to 20 % percentiles of the population (see Fig. 9a, b)
exp. expiration, insp. inspiration, Reff effective resistance, SD standard deviation, VR vertex resistance
Fig. 9Effect of logarithmic transformation on the statistical distribution of effective resistance values
Lost results because of non-reached pressure level of 150 Pa
| Total | Phase 1 | Phase 2 | Phase 3 | Phase 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before decongestion | 20,069 | 19,275 | 19,103 | 18,571 | 18,482 |
| No result | 894 | 966 | 1498 | 1587 | |
| No result (%) | 4.45 | 5.04 | 7.84 | 8.55 | |
| After decongestion | 15,962 | 15,918 | 15,511 | 15,471 | |
| No result | 532 | 576 | 983 | 1023 | |
| No result (%) | 3.23 | 3.61 | 6.18 | 6.60 |
Fig. 4Statistical differences for the flow at 150 Pa in four breathing phases
Descriptive statistics of the differences between phases 1 and 2 and phases 3 and 4
| Difference in flow 150 (%) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before decongestion | After decongestion | |||
| Phase 1–2 | Phase 3–4 | Phase 1–2 | Phase 3–4 | |
| Arithmetic mean | 15.6 | −30.0 | 13.4 | −28.7 |
| Median | 9.1 | −17.2 | 7.2 | −17.3 |
| Standard deviation | 22.5 | 38.0 | 20.2 | 32.6 |
| Skewness | 1.2 | −1.9 | 1.4 | −1.9 |
| Minimum | −31.5 | −217.9 | −26.6 | −179.4 |
| Maximum | 99.2 | 34.4 | 91.4 | 15.5 |
| Number | 18,129 | 17,489 | 15,118 | 14,605 |
Fig. 5Histograms of the differences for the flow at 150 Pa between different breathing phases (%)
Fig. 6a, b Typical “valve phenomena” in four-phase rhinomanometry
Fig. 7Typical valve phenomena. In curve A, Log VRin = 1.45 and Log Reffin = 1.69; in curve B, Log VRin = 1.06 and Log Reffin = 1.14 Pa/cm3
Abbreviations for 4PR parameters
| Value | Logarithmic transformation [Log(10 * value)] | |
|---|---|---|
| Vertex resistance, inspiration | VRin | LVRin |
| Vertex resistance, expiration | VRex | LVRex |
| Effective resistance, inspiration | Reffin | LReffin |
| Effective resistance, expiration | Reffex | LReffex |
| Effective resistance, total breath | Reff | LReff |
Classification of subjective obstruction following a visual analog scale (see Fig. 8a, b)
| Percentiles | Class | Before decongestion | After decongestion |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–19 | 1 | ≤14 | ≤59 |
| 20–39 | 2 | 15–30 | 60–71 |
| 40–59 | 3 | 31–61 | 72–79 |
| 60–79 | 4 | 62–66 | 80–88 |
| 80–100 | 5 | >66 | >88 |
Fig. 8a, b Histograms of subjective obstruction measured on a visual analog scale
Correlation between subjective obstruction based on a visual analog scale and 4PR parameters
| Before decongestion | After decongestion | |
|---|---|---|
| Flow 150 phase 1 | 0.495 | 0.469 |
| Flow 150 phase 2 | 0.500 | 0.443 |
| Flow 150 phase 3 | −0.495 | −0.505 |
| Flow 150 phase 4 | −0.508 | −0.509 |
| VR, inspiration | −0.391 | −0.332 |
| VR, expiration | −0.318 | −0.450 |
| Log VR, inspiration | −0.543 | −0.529 |
| Log VR, expiration | −0.529 | −0.513 |
| Reff, inspiration | −0.377 | −0.315 |
| Reff, expiration | −0.367 | −0.344 |
| Reff | −0.387 | −0.323 |
| Log Reff, inspiration | −0.549 | −0.535 |
| Log Reff, expiration | −0.530 | −0.521 |
| Log Reff | −0.553 | −0.546 |
Classification of logarithmic effective resistance (pre-study) (n = 1580) [6]
Classification of logarithmic effective resistance (n = 36,563)
The proposal for the clinical classification is also valid for the Logarithmic effective resistance when measured only in inspiration or expiration and the logarithmic vertex resistance in inspiration and expiration
Fig. 10a, b Histograms of the statistical distribution of Log Reffin before and after decongestion