Ventilatory Tests and Pulmonary Conductance in Hospitalized Patients |
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Authors: | Neville Lefcoe |
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Abstract: | In a series of 49 patients, including individuals with varying lung pathology and some older patients with no lung disease, the usual excellent correlation between first-second forced expiratory volume and maximum breathing capacity was found (coefficient of correlation=0.88). The first-second forced expiratory volume and maximum mid-expiratory flow rate were also seen to be closely related (coefficient of correlation=0.87). The relationship between these ventilatory tests and direct mechanical measurements of pulmonary resistance, however, was not as striking. Reduction in pulmonary compliance not due to loss or removal of pulmonary tissue did not affect the interrelationships between these tests. First-second forced expiratory volume, expressed as a percentage of the predicted vital capacity, was more closely related to the expression “% of predicted maximum breathing capacity” than the first-second forced expiratory volume, expressed as a percentage of the actual vital capacity (p<.05). |
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