Test Overview
Lung function tests (also called pulmonary function tests, or PFTs)
evaluate how well your lungs work. The tests determine how much air your
lungs
can hold, how quickly you can move air in and
out of your lungs, and how well your lungs put oxygen into and remove carbon
dioxide from your blood. The tests can diagnose lung diseases, measure the
severity of lung problems, and check to see how well treatment for a lung
disease is working.
Other tests such as residual volume, gas diffusion tests, body
plethysmography, inhalation challenge tests, and exercise stress tests may also
be done to determine lung function.
Spirometry is the first lung function test
done. It measures how much and how quickly you can move air out of your lungs.
For this test, you breathe into a mouthpiece attached to a recording device
(spirometer). The information collected by the spirometer may be printed out on
a chart called a spirogram.
The more common lung function values measured with spirometry
are:
-
Forced vital capacity (FVC). This measures
the amount of air you can exhale with force after you inhale as deeply as
possible.
-
Forced expiratory volume (FEV).
This measures the amount of air you can exhale with force in one breath. The
amount of air you exhale may be measured at 1 second
(FEV1), 2 seconds (FEV2), or 3
seconds (FEV3). FEV1 divided by
FVC can also be determined.
-
Forced expiratory flow
25% to 75%. This measures the air flow halfway through an exhale
(FVC).
-
Peak expiratory flow (PEF). This
measures how quickly you can exhale. It is usually measured at the same time as
your forced vital capacity (FVC).
-
Maximum voluntary
ventilation (MVV). This measures the greatest amount of air you can
breathe in and out during one minute.
-
Slow vital
capacity (SVC). This measures the amount of air you can slowly exhale
after you inhale as deeply as possible.
-
Total lung
capacity (TLC). This measures the amount of air in your lungs after you
inhale as deeply as possible.
-
Functional residual
capacity (FRC). This measures the amount of air in your lungs at the end
of a normal exhaled breath.
-
Expiratory reserve
volume (ERV). This measures the difference between the amount of air in
your lungs after a normal exhale (FRC) and the amount after you exhale with
force (RV).
Gas diffusion tests
Gas diffusion tests measure the amount of
oxygen
and other gases
that cross the lungs' air sacs (alveoli
) per minute.
These tests evaluate how well gases are being absorbed into your blood from
your lungs. Gas diffusion tests include:
-
Arterial blood gases, which determine
the amount of oxygen and carbon dioxide in your bloodstream.
- Carbon
monoxide diffusing capacity (also called transfer factor, or TF), which
measures how well your lungs transfer a small amount of carbon monoxide (CO)
into the blood. Two different methods are used for this test. If the
single-breath or breath-holding method is used, you will take a breath of air
containing a very small amount of carbon monoxide from a container while
measurements are taken. In the steady-state method, you will breathe air
containing a very small amount of carbon monoxide from a container. The amount
of carbon monoxide in the breath you exhale is then measured. Diffusing
capacity provides an estimate of how well a gas is able to move from your lungs
into your blood.
Body plethysmography
Body plethysmography may be used to measure:
- Total lung capacity (TLC), which is the total amount of air
your lungs can hold. For this test, you sit inside an airtight booth called a
plethysmograph and breathe through a mouthpiece while pressure and air flow
measurements are collected.
- Residual volume (RV), which is the
amount of air that remains in your lungs after you exhale as completely as
possible. For this test, you sit inside the plethysmograph booth and breathe a
known amount of a gas (either 100% oxygen or a certain amount of helium in
air). The test measures how the concentration of the gases in the booth
changes.
Inhalation challenge tests
Inhalation challenge tests are done to measure the response of
your airways to substances (allergens) that may be causing
asthma or wheezing. The tests also may determine the
effect of chemicals such as histamine or methacholine on your airways. These
tests are also called provocation studies.
During inhalation testing, increasing amounts of an allergen are
inhaled through a nebulizer, a device that uses a face mask or mouthpiece to
deliver the allergen in a fine mist (aerosol). Alternatively, increasing
amounts of a substance (histamine or methacholine) may be inhaled through the
nebulizer. Before and after inhaling the substance, spirometry readings are
taken to evaluate lung function.
In rare cases, a
bronchospasm can occur with inhalation challenge
testing. You will be closely monitored during and after the test.
Exercise stress tests
Exercise stress tests evaluate the effect of exercise on lung
function tests. Spirometry readings are done after exercise and then again at
rest.
Lung function results are measured directly in some tests and are
calculated in others. No single test can determine all of the lung function
values, so more than one type of test may be done. Some of the tests may be
repeated after you inhale medicine that enlarges your airways
(bronchodilator).