Abstract

The diagnostic efficiency of estimating the duration of forced expiratory noises under the conditions of bronchial obstruction has been shown. The objective of this study was to analyze the response of the forced expiratory noise duration to the bronchodilatation test with the β2-agonist in the age- and genderhomogenous group of healthy volunteers and bronchial asthma patients selected as a model of variable bronchial obstruction. Two hundred and sixty young men (16–25 years old) were examined. It was shown that the prevailing type of response in bronchial asthma patients with spirometry confirmed bronchial obstruction was shortened forced expiratory noises. Furthermore, the degree of the shortening considerably depended on the severity of the background bronchial obstruction. The absence of a statistically significant response of the forced expiratory noise duration dominated among healthy volunteers (nonsmokers as well as smokers) and bronchial asthma patients without a spirometry confirmed bronchial obstruction. However, the shortened response occurred much more frequently in bronchial asthma patients than in healthy volunteers. The high specificity (86%) of the response as shortened forced expiratory noises to the β2-agonist may be useful for diagnostics.

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