| Literature DB >> 30570372 |
Ingvild Bruun Mikalsen1,2, Damoun Nassehi3, Knut Øymar1,2.
Abstract
Introduction: Variable airflow obstruction that can be confirmed by diurnal variability of peak expiratory flow (PEF) >13% is an important characteristic of asthma. Home monitoring of PEF may be helpful to diagnose and monitor asthma. In this feasibility study, we aimed to study if asthmatic children can measure PEF at home twice daily during a 4-week period using a device designed as a "whistle" and a smart phone software application. Materials andEntities:
Keywords: asthma; child; e-health; peak expiratory flow; smart phone application; telemedicine; telemonitoring
Year: 2018 PMID: 30570372 PMCID: PMC6842893 DOI: 10.1089/tmj.2018.0270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Telemed J E Health ISSN: 1530-5627 Impact factor: 3.536

The device is a plastic vortex whistle consisting of an inlet, a circular main chamber, and a vertical outlet.

The figure shows the wheel that the participants had to turn on the application to rate their asthma condition from minimum to maximum.

The figure shows an example of how the participants got visual feedback (rated as percentage) on how they performed compared to their own prior prediction and compared to reference values (indicated by red, yellow, or green background). In the present example, the peak expiratory flow was 230 L/min, which was 72% of their prior prediction.
Baseline Characteristics of the 22 Children Included in the Study
| VARIABLE | MEDIAN (QUARTILES)[ | POTENTIAL SCORE | NUMBER OF RESPONDENTS WITH VALID ANSWERS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Children included (boys/girls) | 22 (16/6) | ||
| Age years; mean (SD) | 10.2 (2.2) | 22 | |
| C-ACT-1 | 10 (10–11) | 0–12 | 19 |
| C-ACT-2 | 11 (10–12) | 0–12 | 19 |
| C-ACT-3 | 11 (9–12) | 0–12 | 17 |
| C-ACT-4 | 11 (7–12) | 0–12 | 17 |
| C-ACT-parents | 13 (9–15) | 0–15 | 19 |
| C-ACT-total | 24 (15.5–27) | 0–27 | 17 |
| PAQLQ | |||
| Overall quality of life | 6.4 (6.1–6.7) | 1–7 | 15 |
| Symptoms | 6.4 (5.4–6.5) | 1–7 | 19 |
| Activities | 6.2 (5.8–6.6) | 1–7 | 15 |
| Emotions | 6.6 (6.0–6.9) | 1–7 | 19 |
Apart from age, the results are presented as median (quartiles).
1 point, severe impairment; 7 points, no impairment; PAQLQ, Pediatric Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire.
C-ACT1–4: childhood asthma control test at week 1–4. C-ACT-total contains C-ACT-4 summarized with C-ACT-parents. C-ACT total score ≥20 indicates a well-controlled asthma.
Number of Successful Peak Expiratory Flow Recordings and Parental Assessment of the Application, During a 4-Week Period in 21 Children Aged 5–12 Years with Physician-Diagnosed Asthma
| VARIABLE | MEDIAN (QUARTILES) | NUMBER OF RESPONDENTS WITH VALID ANSWERS |
|---|---|---|
| Days with at least one measurement, morning or evening | 27 (21–29.5) | 21 |
| Days of measurements both morning and evening | 18 (9–24) | 21 |
| Days of measurements morning | 22 (15.5–26) | 21 |
| Days of measurements evening | 24 (17.5–28) | 21 |
| Parental 1 (application user friendliness) | 5 (4–5) | 15 |
| Parental 2 (application functionality) | 4 (3–5) | 15 |
| Parental 3 (assessment of whistle) | 5 (4–5) | 15 |
| Parental 4 (overall assessment of whistle and application) | 4 (4–5) | 14 |
| Total parental score of application | 18 (15–20) | 14 |
Parental 1–4: Parental assessment of the application, potential score was 0–5 for Parental 1–4 and 0–20 for Total parental score of the application.