31 research outputs found

    Vibration Response Imaging: evaluation of rater agreement in healthy subjects and subjects with pneumonia

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>We evaluated pulmonologists variability in the interpretation of Vibration response imaging (VRI) obtained from healthy subjects and patients hospitalized for community acquired pneumonia.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>The present is a prospective study conducted in a tertiary university hospital. Twenty healthy subjects and twenty three pneumonia cases were included in this study. Six pulmonologists blindly analyzed images of normal subjects and pneumonia cases and evaluated different aspects of VRI images related to the quality of data aquisition, synchronization of the progression of breath sound distribution and agreement between the maximal energy frame (MEF) of VRI (which is the maximal geographical area of lung vibrations produced at maximal inspiration) and chest radiography. For qualitative assessment of VRI images, the raters' evaluations were analyzed by degree of consistency and agreement.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The average value for overall identical evaluations of twelve features of the VRI image evaluation, ranged from 87% to 95% per rater (94% to 97% in control cases and from 79% to 93% per rater in pneumonia cases). Inter-rater median (IQR) agreement was 91% (82-96). The level of agreement according to VRI feature evaluated was in most cases over 80%; intra-class correlation (ICC) obtained by using a model of subject/rater for the averaged features was overall 0.86 (0.92 in normal and 0.73 in pneumonia cases).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Our findings suggest good agreement in the interpretation of VRI data between different raters. In this respect, VRI might be helpful as a radiation free diagnostic tool for the management of pneumonia.</p

    A simple Method to Monitor Performance of Forced Vital Capacity

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    APPLICATION OF PULSES OF NEGATIVE PRESSURE PROVIDES A SIMPLE METHOD FOR ON-LINE RECOGNITION OF WHETHER AN FVC MANEUVERS IS PERFORMED WITH SUFFICIENT EFFORT TO ACHIEVE FLOW LIMITATIO

    Flow limitation and dyspnea in normal supine subjects during methacholine challenge

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    The results of our study show that: 1) most healthy subjects may develop flow limitation and hyperinflation during methacoline challenge in supine position, and 2) at onset of flow limitation there is little or no dyspnea, suggesting that the onset of dynamic airways compression per se does not elicit significant dyspnea. Significant dyspnea probably occurs with marked dynamic hyperinflation
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