Copyright ©ERS Journals Ltd 2003 Face mask spirometry and respiratory pressures in normal subjects1 Dept of Neurology, University Medical Centre Nijmegen, 2 Dept of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Nijmegen, Nijmegen, and , 3 Dept of Pulmonary Diseases, University of Nijmegen, Medical Centre Dekkerswald, Groesbeek, the Netherlands. CORRESPONDENCE: M. Wohlgemuth, University Medical Centre Nijmegen, Dept of Neurology, Reinier Postlaan 4, 6500 HB, Nijmegen, the Netherlands. Fax: 31 243541122. E-mail: M.Wohlgemuth@neuro.umcn.nl Keywords: face mask, reference values, respiratory pressures, spirometry
Received: March 13, 2003
Spirometry and maximal respiratory pressures are pulmonary function parameters commonly used to evaluate respiratory function. Prediction values are available for conventional lung function devices using a standard tube or flanged type of mouthpiece connection. This equipment is not suitable for patients with facial or buccal muscle weakness, because of air leakage around the mouthpiece. A face mask was used for the portable lung function devices used in the neuromuscular department. The aim of this study was to compare the face mask and the conventional mouthpiece for the measurement of spirometry and of respiratory pressures in 22 healthy subjects. Values obtained with the conventional mouthpiece differed significantly from values obtained with the face mask. With the mask, forced vital capacity and forced expiratory volume in one second were 200 mL lower, and maximal expiratory pressure was 3.2 kPa lower than with the mouthpiece. Subsequently, new prediction values for face mask spirometry and maximal respiratory pressures were obtained from 252 other healthy subjects, from which new prediction equations were derived. It was concluded that the face mask connection to the lung function device is a valid alternative, is easy to use and is most useful to monitor changes in patients. This study confirms the importance of appropriate prediction equations, depending on subject-instrument interfaces. Measurement of vital capacity (VC) and maximal respiratory pressures is commonly used to evaluate respiratory function and respiratory muscle strength in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or neuromuscular diseases 13. Portable devices are useful for rapid and simple assessment of respiratory function in the office and atthe bedside. Prediction values of spirometry and maximal respiratory pressures are available for portable and nonportable devices with a standard tube or a flanged type of mouthpiece connection 48. This equipment is only suitable for subjects capable of making a good seal with their lips around the mouthpiece. However, patients with neuromuscular diseases characterised by facial or bulbar muscle weakness, e.g. amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, myasthenia gravis, myotonic dystrophy and facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy, often cannot effectively seal the lips around the mouthpiece, especially during forced manoeuvres such as spirometric and maximal respiratory pressure measurements 9, 10. In these cases, the conventional equipment with a tube or flanged type of mouthpiece is not adequate to evaluate respiratory muscle function. Therefore, a face mask adjusted to a portable spirometer and manometer was used to minimise air leakage in neuromuscular patients. The objective of this study was two-fold. First, possible differences in measurements between the original devices with the conventional mouthpiece and the face mask-adjusted devices were studied in healthy subjects. Secondly, a study torender new prediction equations for face mask spirometry and maximal respiratory pressures in healthy subjects was conducted.
Subjects Healthy volunteers (n=22) were studied using the face maskand the conventional mouthpiece, in a randomised order, for comparison of the connection to the instruments for measurements of spirometry and maximal respiratory pressure. Using the face mask, 20 healthy volunteers performed spirometry and maximal respiratory pressure measurements at day 1 and day 4, to study the within-subject variance. In 15 subjects, the spirometric and the maximal respiratory pressure measurements of two different sizes of masks with different volumes were compared (Leardal mask number 4 and Leardal mask number 5, with volumes of 210 and 150 mL, respectively; Leardal, London, UK). Subsequently, 252 additional healthy subjects were recruited to render new prediction equations for the face mask spirometry and face mask maximal respiratory pressures. Nearly all subjects (99%) were partners accompanying neurological patients visiting the outpatient clinic and all gave their informed consent. Subjects were recruited consecutively, until 20 males and 20 females in each decade from 1880 yrs were included. Exclusion criteria comprised ages of <18 yrs, cardiopulmonary and neuromuscular disease, any chronic disease and use of medication except for sporadic analgesic use and use of oral contraceptives. Data on sex, age, height, weight, smoking status and the lung function parameters were recorded.
Spirometry
Maximal respiratory pressures
Statistical methods
In the first part of the study 22 subjects (nine males and 13 females; mean age 33.4±9.4 yrs, height 176±8.5 cm and weight 75±5 kg) performed two sets of measurements, one using the conventional mouthpiece and one using the face mask connection to the devices. Table 1
Bland and Altman plots of the differences and their means between mouthpiece and mask showed a lack of agreement. The plots showed that the difference increases as the FVC, FEV1 and MEP increase, while this is less for MIP. Figure 1
For the follow-up of neuromuscular patients, the within-subject variation is needed. Using the face mask, the within-subject CV of FVC, FEV1, MEP and MIP, estimated from repeated measurements at day 1 and day 4 in a group of 20 healthy subjects, was 1.4%, 2.1%, 6.4% and 5.4%, respectively. From these results, it was concluded that the pressure measurements obtained using the conventional mouthpiece and the face mask connection cannot be used interchangeably. Additional measurements with two different masks with different volumes showed no statistically significant differences for mean differences in FVC (0.01 L, p=0.73), FEV1 (0.06 L, p=0.19), MIP (0.04 kPa, p=0.76) and MEP (0.19 kPa, p=0.26).
Subsequently, new reference values for spirometry and manometry variables using the face mask-adjusted devices were derived from 252 subjects, 126 males and 126 females. Table 2
Table 3
Although prediction equations of both FVC and FEV1 were in line with those reported in the literature, considering the se of the regression coefficients (table 4
This study demonstrated that face mask adjustment is a valid and easy method to measure respiratory function and respiratory muscle strength in healthy persons. Comparison of the conventional mouthpiece with the face mask connection to the instruments showed that they cannot be used interchangeably. New prediction equations for face mask-adjusted pulmonary portable devices were derived from 252 healthy subjects. Although, the results of the spirometric measurements withthe tube mouthpiece are statistically significantly higher than with the face mask connection, a difference in VC of 100200 mL may not be of clinical importance for a single measurement. However, in the lower ranges a difference of 200 mL may be worth noticing, especially in follow-up measurements within neuromuscular patients for early detection of respiratory failure. From the literature, it is known that the average within-subject sd of repeated measurements of the VC is 90200 mL 6. An acceptable low CV for the FVC of 1.4% was found, showing that the face mask measurements have an excellent reproducibility. The differences in FVC and FEV1 between tube and mask are very similar, suggesting that the main differences occur in the beginning of the forced manoeuvres. To investigate the possibility of the influence of the volume of the mask being used, additional measurements were performed to test two different masks with different volumes. The results showed nosignificant differences between the two masks for FVC andFEV1 and they can be used interchangeably. The only difference in measurement conditions was that inthe mouthpiece situation the subjects themselves held the instruments, whereas in the face mask situation, the instrument was held by the observer. It is possible that the subjects did not make full maximal efforts in the latter situation. The maximal respiratory pressures obtained with the flanged mouthpiece were higher than the ones obtained with the face mask. Activation of buccal muscles may explain thedifferences, in spite of the small leak in the pressure transducer. The between-subject variance using the flanged type of mouthpiece was much higher compared with the face mask variance. For the face mask experiments, it was decided that the investigator should hold the instrument. The investigator had to press the mask tightly against the subjects face to prevent air leakage. The impression was that, especially during the forced manoeuvres i.e. during the FVC and MEP measurements, a few subjects appeared to hold back. This could have influenced the predicted values for these manoeuvres negatively, especially for the higher values. Another probable explanation can be the relative fixation of the head when placing the mask against the subject's face by the investigator, whereas in the mouthpiece measurements theinstruments were held by the subjects. The slight head movement of the subjects in the mouthpiece group may have influenced the measurements and resulted in higher values. Both the buccal muscles activation, the hold-back hypothesis and head fixation may explain the differences in values and in variance particularly in the higher ranges.
There were no significant differences between mask number 4 and number 5 for the MIP and MEP measurements. For the pressure measurements, it is suggested that the size and type of mask is not crucial. In the second part of the study, new reference values were obtained in healthy adults, and new prediction equations derived by multivariate regression analysis. For the spirometry, the same explanatory variables in the equations as those in the prediction equations of Quanjer et al. 6 are of importance. The results of both conventional spirometry and face mask spirometry were higher compared with the predicted reference values of Quanjer et al. 6. In males, the values of FVC varied from 20% higher at the age of 20 yrs to 8% higher at the age of 70 yrs compared with the predicted values of Quanjer et al. 6. The same pattern is seen in females at different levels of FVC. Similar trends of decreasing differences with increasing age were noticed in the comparison of the predicted values for FEV1 and for the ratio FEV1/FVC. The predicted equations of Quanjer et al. 6 are commonly used in Europe and several studies have indicated that these equations significantly underestimate predicted FEV1 and FVC 1215. The present results confirm this indication. Possible causes, such as population/selection criteria, cohort effect and technical factors, remain uncertain. Both smokers and former smokers were included in the present study, because there was no significant effect nor was there an age-related effect of smoking on prediction values. This is surprising, because several studies did show a negative effect of smoking on predicted values 15 especially on predicted FEV1 and to a lesser extent on FVC. In this study, however, 39% of the smokers were former smokers and stopped smoking
Comparison of the face mask prediction equations of the maximal respiratory pressures with the predicted equations of Wilson et al. 8 is more difficult, because of the different explanatory variables. The difference in the final prediction equations cannot be explained by the statistical method being used, because the same variables i.e. age, height and weight, were included in the stepwise regression analyses. In this study, weight and age are significant in predicting maximal respiratory pressures (table 5 The usefulness of maximal respiratory pressures is often debated because of the remarkably large interstudy variability in reference values in the literature 4, 7, 8, 1619. Koulouris et al. 20 and Tully et al. 21 reported that maximal respiratory pressures depend much on the type ofmouthpiece being used. The tube mouthpiece used by Ringqvist 19, by Black and Hyatt 4 and by Rochester and Arora 22 showed higher values than the flanged mouthpiece used by Wilson et al. 8, by Leech et al. 17 and by Vincken et al. 7. Cook et al. 16 suggested that higher expiratory pressures would be obtained using a tube-type mouthpiece, because it prevented air leakage around the mouthpiece, whereas Koulouris et al. 20 claimed that themanner in which the mouthpiece is used is important. The present data matched that of Koulouris et al. 20 because audible air leakage was an exclusion criteria in this study. In a few subjects, the presence of a moustache or beard precluded a proper sealing of the mask against the face. In these cases unnoticed leakage could not be excluded and therefore these subjects were withdrawn from this study. Next to the type of mouthpiece connection, measurement of maximal respiratory pressures depends strongly on the skill of the investigator, population features and sample size. Moreover, interindividual factors as degrees of cooperation and coordination of the different respiratory muscles seem to be of great importance. In this study, the face mask devices were held by the investigator instead of the subjects, because patients with neuromuscular disease often have weakness of the arm muscles. This lack of control of the subject, being connected to the apparatus may preclude a real maximal effort. The same investigator performed all measurements toavoid possible interinvestigator bias. Both smokers and nonsmokers were included in this study. In line with the literature on reference values 4, 5, 7, 8, smoking status was not significant in predicted values of MIP and MEP. A marked between-subject variability is seen throughout the literature (2540%) and was noticed in this study as well. To date, the best explanation is that it may reflect the different (use of) musculature of individuals 5 and the uncontrollable aspect of the voluntary effort by the subject. When taking the population and the technique into account, the present face mask data matched best with those of Wilson et al. 8, who had a similar population and methodology. The results show that measurements obtained using the face mask manometer are closely related to those obtained by the flanged mouthpiece as in the Vincken et al. 7 and Wilson et al. 8 studies. Although MEP values obtained with a face mask device are lower, this will not be of clinical importance if the appropriate reference ranges are used. Moreover, the most important information in individual patients is obtained by monitoring intraindividual changes in MIP and MEP over time. In this study the within-subject variability is much smaller compared with the CVs for MEP of 7.1% and for MIP of 10.2 % in the study by Wilson et al. 8. Fiz et al. 23 suggested the technique of manually holding the lips around the mouthpiece in patients with facial weakness to prevent air leakage. Some prefer the sniff nasal inspiratory pressure in assessing inspiratory muscle force in patients. Chaudri et al. 24 used a tight-fitting face mask to measure VC, and both MIP and MEP in some of the patients with difficulty in inserting or holding the mouthpiece, but refrained from commenting on the reference values. The present study showed that using a face mask is an adequate method for ventilatory assessment in healthy adult persons at an outpatient clinic. The use of a face mask is recommended in patients with neuromuscular disease or more specifically in patients with facial weakness for screening purposes. It is a simple and effective alternative method, which can be most useful in monitoring changes in patients. Furthermore, it can be used for studies on natural course and respiratory function in neuromuscular disease. Finally, this study confirms the importance of using appropriate prediction values.
The authors would like to thank L.M. Haegens and M. Verbruggen for their excellent technical support and wish to acknowledge C. Smeets and O.J. Vogels for their valuable advise.
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