Abstract

After completing this article, readers should be able to: 1. Describe the information that measurements of forced expiratory flow can provide in spontaneously breathing and mechanically ventilated infants. 2. Delineate how lung volume can be measured. The measurements of forced expiratory flows and lung volumes are important to the evaluation of patients who have respiratory symptoms. Until recently, measurements have been restricted to adults and children old enough to cooperate with testing maneuvers. Newer techniques have enabled such measurements to be made in infants and led to improved understanding of normal lung and airway growth during infancy and early childhood, when dramatic changes occur. The measurements have had important clinical uses in the evaluation and treatment of infants who have respiratory disease, but their use has been limited because they require specialized equipment and expertise as well as sedation of the infant. In this article, we discuss the techniques required for measurement of forced expiratory flows and lung volumes, their limitations, and applications in clinical practice. Detection of airflow obstruction, by physical examination or by quantitative measurement techniques, is facilitated by increasing expiratory flow rates. Measurement of forced expiratory flows is useful because flow rates are inversely proportional to the fourth power of the radius of the airway and, therefore, are indicative of airway size when flow is limited. Disease states affecting the airways, including asthma, bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), or congenital lesions such as pulmonary hypoplasia or vascular airway compression, are expected to decrease expiratory flow. Infants typically are sedated for testing to maintain relaxed breathing with a face mask placed over the mouth and nose. This sedation often is perceived by parents and physicians as one of the barriers to such testing. (1) However, sedation can be achieved safely using oral chloral hydrate at a dose of 80 to 100 mg/kg. …

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