Abstract

In 16 healthy and 16 asymptomatic asthmatic children (age range 5-8 yr; 8 girls, 24 boys) we studied the influence of breathing frequency on the results and the diagnostic value of body plethysmographic measurements. Airway resistance (Raw), specific airway resistance (SRaw), and thoracic gas volume (TGV) were measured during breathing (or breathing efforts against a closed shutter) at 0.4, 1, and 2 Hz. SRaw was computed by a simplified procedure directly from flow at the mouth vs. box volume-curves. The diagnostic value of each parameter was assessed as the percentage of correctly classified healthy and asthmatic subjects by means of discriminant analysis. When frequency was increased from 0.4 to 1 and 2 Hz mean TGV rose by 5 and 14% in healthy children and by 11 and 21% in asthmatic children, respectively. From 0.4 to 1 Hz mean Raw decreased by 16% (P = 0.002) in healthy children and by 25% (P = 0.0004) in asthmatic children. The differences in Raw between both groups decreased with frequency (3.5, 1.8, and 1.5 cm H2O.L-1.s at 0.4, 1, and 2 Hz, respectively) and those of TGV increased (0.13, 0.21, and 0.23 L). SRaw showed similar frequency characteristics as Raw. As intra-group variability changed in parallel with the differences the diagnostic value of the parameters remained constant with frequency. Simplified SRaw alone and TGV combined with Raw exhibited no differences in their diagnostic values (81-84% correctly classified).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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