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1 Unitat de Biofísica i Bioenginyeria, Facultat de Medicina, Universitat de Barcelona, IDIBAPS, Spain. 2 Servei de Pneumologia, Hospital Clínic, Barcelona, Spain. 3 Dept d'Electrònica, Facultat de Física, Universitat de Barcelona, Spain
CORRESPONDENCE: R. Farré, Unitat de Biofísica i Bioenginyeria, Facultat de Medicina, Casanova 143, 08036, Barcelona, Spain. Fax: 34 934024516
Keywords: home health care, lung function, respiratory resistance, telemedicine
Received: May 16, 2001
Accepted August 21, 2001
This work was supported in part by Comisión Interministerial de Ciencia y Tecnología (CICYT, SAF99-0001), by Dirección General de Enseñanza Superior e Investigación Científica (DGESIC, PM98-0027) and by the European Commission (CHRONIC, V Programme, IST_DG XIII, 1999-12158).
| Abstract |
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The system devised is based on a microprocessor, which allows online computation of respiratory resistance (Rrs) and reactance (Xrs) and reliability indices. The portable device was compared with a conventional FOT system by using signals from 14 patients with chronic respiratory disease.
This device has the same computation capabilities and flexibility as conventional FOT systems and meets the requirements for home application. Rrs (14.2±6.0 cmH2O·s·L1, mean±sd) and Xrs (5.3±2.7 cmH2O·s·L1) measured at 5 Hz by the portable system virtually coincided with those computed with the reference conventional FOT system: mean differences±sd were 0.074±0.025 and 0.005±0.009 cmH2O·s·L1, respectively.
This portable forced oscillation technique device could be a useful tool for monitoring respiratory mechanics in ambulatory and home care applications.
The increasing demand for health services due to advances in medicine and ageing of the population has resulted in a progressive rise in patient admission. This is particularly important in chronic respiratory diseases whose prevalence is expected to considerably increase in the near future 1. To alleviate this problem health services using home care and follow-up programmes are provided 2. This has led to a more frequent use of portable and home devices in conjunction with advances in telemedicine 3. In the home care programmes addressed to respiratory disorders, spirometry is the gold standard for measuring pulmonary function in patients with asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Nevertheless, there is a subgroup of patients where lung function is hardly assessed since spirometry is not applicable. Indeed, in many paediatric or elderly patients 4 spirometry cannot be carried out in accordance with the conventional quality standards 5. Moreover, repeated reproducible spirometry is difficult in asthmatic patients given that forced manoeuvres can alter the bronchomotor tone in these patients 6.
The forced oscillation technique (FOT) is a useful tool for assessing lung function in the situations where spirometry is of difficult or impossible application. FOT is a noninvasive method based on superimposing a high frequency (>2 Hz) and small amplitude (
1 cmH2O) pressure oscillation at the mouth of the patient during spontaneous breathing 7 and, consequently, patient cooperation is not required. Total respiratory system resistance (Rrs) and reactance (Xrs) are computed from the oscillatory components of the pressure and flow signals recorded at the mouth. At present, most of the commercially available FOT devices are aimed at lung function laboratory application and they cannot be applied at home because of their dimensions, complexity and cost. However, using FOT at home or in ambulatory applications could be possible should a suitable portable device be available. In addition to meeting the conventional FOT recommendations 8, such an instrument should be easy to operate. Moreover, measurement, robustness and reliability should be enhanced. Accordingly, the aim of this work was to design and test a small and portable FOT device based on a microprocessor for ambulatory and home care applications.
| Methods |
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2), computed from the auto-spectra of pressure (GPP) and flow (GVV) and the cross-spectrum of pressure and flow (GPV) 12. To this end, the 16 s filtered pressure and flow signals were divided into 7 blocks of 4 s (50% overlapping). GPP, GVV and GPV at the excitation frequency were computed online for each block as described in 13 and averaged. A coherence function >0.95, which is a conventional threshold for 16 s measurements, was required for measurement acceptance. The mean Rrs and Xrs values computed over 16 s were shown in the two displays. Pressure, flow and online Rrs signals were sent to the analogue outputs for optional monitoring.
The system devised includes all the excitation, sensors and computation capabilities needed to perform FOT measurements in a portable device. The flexible tube (fig. 1
) allows the mouthpiece to be comfortably adapted to the patient when in a sitting or supine position. The FOT excitation subsystem is able to generate an almost constant pressure oscillation for the whole range of expected patient resistance (0.71.0 cmH2O peak-to-peak for a 250 cmH2O·s·L1 patient resistance). Taking into account the shunt resistance and the pneumotachograph resistance, the device imposes a total load of <1 cmH2O·s·L1 at the mouth of the patient. The dead space of the system (45 cm3) is low enough to avoid increase in the fractional CO2 concentration at the mouth, given the short duration of a conventional FOT measurement (<30 s). The operation mode is very simple and consists of two steps. The first one, which is optional, is addressed to verify the system calibration. To this end, the transducer head should be connected to the reference resistance placed in the front panel of the device. According to the stability of the device, a measured value on the reference resistance systematically beyond a ±5% tolerance should be considered as indicative of system malfunction. In this case, the instructions given to the patient demand him/her to repeat the calibration and, if the difference persists, to call the hospital staff in charge of the home care programme. The second step, which is the patient measurement, only requires the patient to push a "start" button and breathe normally through the mouthpiece for 20 s (4 s for subject adaptation and 16 s for Rrs and Xrs measurement) while holding his/her cheeks. If the coherence is lower than the acceptance threshold (0.95), the result is rejected and the device demands another measurement by means of a red light at the front panel.
The performance of the DSP-based platform of the portable FOT device was evaluated when subjected to signals typically found in the clinical application. To this end, the pressure, flow, Rrs and Xrs signals corresponding to a previous FOT study 9 in 14 patients with severe chronic respiratory disease were used. Eight of the patients suffered from COPD and the other six patients presented a restrictive ventilatory defect due to chest wall disease. The anthropometric and lung function data of these patients are described in detail elsewhere 9. The patients were in a stable clinical condition at the time of the study and measurements were carried out in a sitting posture during normal breathing. The study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the Hospital Clinic Provincial, Barcelona, Spain and informed consent was obtained from each patient. For the evaluation of the DSP-platform of the portable FOT device, the execution programme was slightly modified to send the online Rrs and Xrs signals to the analogue outputs. The previously stored flow and pressure signals were analogically reproduced by a personal computer (PC) with an analogue-digital/digital-analogue (AD/DA) board and were fed into the AD converter of the portable FOT device. The corresponding Rrs and Xrs analogue signals computed by the DSP-platform were acquired by the PC and compared with the reference Rrs and Xrs signals stored. For each patient, the time course of Rrs and Xrs along the breathing cycle was compared as well as the mean values computed over a 16 s period. The mean values obtained from the portable FOT device were compared with the corresponding mean values of the reference signals using linear regression and the Bland and Altman analysis 14 (mean difference and limits of agreement defined as mean±2sd of differences).
The repeatability of the measurements obtained with the whole portable device was assessed with measurements on the reference resistance and on patients with COPD. First, one calibration measurement was carried out on 21 different days. Second, five consecutive resistance measurements (16 s each) were performed with the portable device in eight patients with severe COPD (forced expiratory volume in one second=30.4±26.7% predicted). The coefficient of variation of the resistance in each patient was computed from the five measured values.
| Results |
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2=0.76) was below the acceptance threshold and, consequently, the result was automatically rejected and the device demanded a subsequent measurement.
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| Discussion |
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At present most of the commercially available FOT devices are based on a general-purpose PC for controlling the excitation system, acquiring the signals and processing the data. They are programmed with complex algorithms such as pseudorandom noise excitation for simultaneously assessing Rrs and Xrs at multiple frequencies, for computing the frequency of resonance and for differentiating between inspiration and expiration. Although these devices have considerable facilities in the computation algorithm, their characteristics are not addressed to those applications where a simple and portable measuring system is required, such as home care and ambulatory applications. Other simpler FOT devices are based on monofrequency oscillation or on computing the amplitude of respiratory impedance 15. Although these systems had been useful for assessing airway obstruction, particularly during sleep 16,17, they are not able to change the oscillation frequency or to apply multifrequency oscillation and their computation algorithm does not provide selective information on Rrs and Xrs.
The FOT system developed in this work is aimed at home and ambulatory applications where small and compact devices are required. The core of this prototype is based on a microprocessor to achieve the same software capabilities of the commercial FOT devices (multifrequency, mean values, inspiratory/expiratory phases, reliability indices, etc.). Modifying the software, e.g. to include the selection of different oscillation frequencies, would only require changing the programme stored in the memory (EPROM, fig. 1
). Software flexibility facilitates the implementation of new applications and updating to future FOT standards or regulations 8. This DSP-based device may also be used in other applications such as monitoring home ventilation 18 or simplified home polysomnography. In these applications, the computation algorithm could include a routine to compensate for leaks in the mask 9 or to simplify FOT measurements by placing the transducer-head away from the patient 19. From the practical viewpoint of respiratory monitoring, it is worth noting that the designed FOT device includes all the instrumentation (pneumotachograph, pressure transducers and a programmable processor) for implementing a conventional digital spirometer provided that the pneumotachograph performance is in keeping with the range of measured flow. Accordingly, FOT and forced spirometry could be combined in the same portable device to perform more complete lung function assessment at home.
In conclusion, this study demonstrates that FOT can be implemented in a portable system. The device developed is able to compute Rrs and Xrs in real time and combines the computation capabilities and flexibility of conventional systems, and the advantages of low-cost and portability. Given its characteristics and performance this device is particularly suited for monitoring respiratory mechanics in home care and ambulatory applications. Moreover, this microprocessor-based device could include a communication interface with internet capabilities. This would provide online interaction between the patient at home and the health provider 3 for a suitable follow-up of his/her disease. This application is in keeping with the current trend in providing health care at the patient's home. It could be useful for the daily monitoring of variability in airway obstruction in patients with asthma and for adjusting the treatment accordingly 20.
| Acknowledgements |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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R. Farre and D. Navajas Assessment of expiratory flow limitation in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a new approach Eur. Respir. J., February 1, 2004; 23(2): 187 - 188. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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J. Rigau, F. Burgos, C. Hernandez, J. Roca, D. Navajas, and R. Farre Unsupervised self-testing of airway obstruction by forced oscillation at the patient's home Eur. Respir. J., October 1, 2003; 22(4): 668 - 671. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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