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Oscillometry to assess ventilation heterogeneity during hospital admission for acute cardiorespiratory illness

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posted on 2025-07-31, 15:07 authored by Masarrah Aliaroof, Wadah Ibrahim, Hnin Aung, Rebecca L Cordell, Michael J Wilde, Matthew Richardson, Dahlia Salman, Amisha Singapuri, Robert C Free, Erol Gaillard, Paul Thomas, Paul MonksPaul Monks, Christopher E Brightling, Salman Siddiqui, Neil GreeningNeil Greening
RationaleHospitalisation due to exacerbations of cardiorespiratory disease results in reduced lung function and increased airways obstruction. However, traditional measures of lung function require maximal effort which is difficult when patients are unwell (e.g.FEV1) and may focus on larger airways away from the major part of airways disease (e.g.peak flow). We aimed to measure whole airways function using oscillometry in patients during hospitalisation with cardiorespiratory illness compared with healthy controls.MethodParticipants (n=310) underwent assessment; 263 were admitted to hospital with acute cardiorespiratory illness (asthma (n=80), COPD (n=75), heart failure (n=46) and pneumonia (n=62)) and 47 healthy controls were included. Participants underwent handheld oscillometry measurements within the first 24 h of admission.ResultsOscillometry measurement was feasible in all patients (n=310). There was a significant difference in both absolute and percentage predicted measures of lung mechanics (p<0.05 for all measures), with significantly worse lung mechanics in patients with COPD. Measures of resistance and reactance were worse in those that were more breathless (p<0.0001), had more wheeze (p<0.001) and had low oxygen saturation (p<0.001). No difference was seen based on modified early warning system score or blood biomarkers (eosinophil count, C-reactive protein and brain natriuretic peptide). There were significant improvements in oscillometry measures in those that attended following recovery from acute illness.ConclusionHandheld oscillometry can be feasibly deployed in the acute care setting to obtain information on respiratory mechanics. It demonstrates significant differences in ventilation heterogeneity between patients in the acute care setting and healthy volunteers.<p></p>

History

Author affiliation

College of Life Sciences College of Science & Engineering Respiratory Sciences Chemistry

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

ERJ Open Research

Volume

11

Issue

3

Pagination

00351 - 2024

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

issn

2312-0541

eissn

2312-0541

Copyright date

2025

Available date

2025-07-31

Spatial coverage

England

Language

en

Deposited by

Professor Paul Monks

Deposit date

2025-06-29

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