The aim of this study was to evaluate whether the intrasession reproducibility of forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) depends on height and lung volume. FVC tracings of 740 subjects (350 males) from a general population sample living in North Italy were analyzed. Subjects filled out a standardized questionnaire and performed three acceptable FVC maneuvers following the American Thoracic Society recommendations. The differences between the largest and the second largest FVC and FEV1 were computed as absolute (?FVC, ?FEV1) and as percentage values (?FVC%, ?FEV1%). The higher the tertiles of the largest FVC and FEV1 were, the higher were ?FVC and ?FEV1. Regarding FVC, borderline differences in both sexes for ?FVC and in males significant differences for ?FVC% were found among the tertiles. Regarding FEV1, in both sexes ?FEV1 significantly differed among the tertiles, ?FVC and ?FEV1 correlated with height and lung volume in both sexes, except for ?FVC versus the largest FVC in females. When ?FVC and ?FEV1 were analyzed with respect to respiratory symptoms/diseases and smoking habit, no significant differences were observed in both sexes, except for ?FEV1 between ever- and never-smoking males. It may be concluded that the intrasession within-subject variability of FVC and FEV1 is proportional to lung volume and height, regard less of the sex, presence of symptoms and smoking habit. Thus, our results confirm the usefulness of a reproducibility criterion based on a percentage rather than on a fixed volume.

Selection of reproducible forced expirograms: percentage or fixed-volume criterion

Viegi G;
1999

Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate whether the intrasession reproducibility of forced vital capacity (FVC) and forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) depends on height and lung volume. FVC tracings of 740 subjects (350 males) from a general population sample living in North Italy were analyzed. Subjects filled out a standardized questionnaire and performed three acceptable FVC maneuvers following the American Thoracic Society recommendations. The differences between the largest and the second largest FVC and FEV1 were computed as absolute (?FVC, ?FEV1) and as percentage values (?FVC%, ?FEV1%). The higher the tertiles of the largest FVC and FEV1 were, the higher were ?FVC and ?FEV1. Regarding FVC, borderline differences in both sexes for ?FVC and in males significant differences for ?FVC% were found among the tertiles. Regarding FEV1, in both sexes ?FEV1 significantly differed among the tertiles, ?FVC and ?FEV1 correlated with height and lung volume in both sexes, except for ?FVC versus the largest FVC in females. When ?FVC and ?FEV1 were analyzed with respect to respiratory symptoms/diseases and smoking habit, no significant differences were observed in both sexes, except for ?FEV1 between ever- and never-smoking males. It may be concluded that the intrasession within-subject variability of FVC and FEV1 is proportional to lung volume and height, regard less of the sex, presence of symptoms and smoking habit. Thus, our results confirm the usefulness of a reproducibility criterion based on a percentage rather than on a fixed volume.
1999
Istituto di Fisiologia Clinica - IFC
Reproducibility criteria
spirometry test failure
general population survey
forced vital capacity
forced expiratory volume
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/213467
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