• Respiratory care · May 2019

    Reduced FEV1/FVC and FEV1 in the Normal Range as a Physiological Variant.

    • Luciana Dos Santos Andreata, Maria Raquel Soares, and Carlos Ac Pereira.
    • Postgraduate Program in Internal Medicine, Civil Servant State Public Hospital of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil. luluandreata@gmail.com.
    • Respir Care. 2019 May 1; 64 (5): 570-575.

    BackgroundHealthy individuals without respiratory symptoms can sometimes present with low FEV1/FVC. The objective of this study was to characterize and compare subjects without symptoms and with reduced FEV1/FVC but normal FEV1 with subjects with mild obstructive lung disease.MethodsFifty healthy subjects with FEV1/FVC below the fifth percentile of reference values (normal variants) were compared with 52 subjects with asthma and 48 subjects with COPD who had similar FEV1/FVC.ResultsSubjects without symptoms were more likely to be male, younger, and taller, and to have higher FVC%, FEV1%, mid expiratory flow, and terminal flow than subjects with obstructive disease. A receiver operating characteristic curve analysis determined that the best separation between the groups was provided by age < 55 y, height ≥ 167 cm, and FVC > 105%. A logistic regression analysis confirmed that male sex, age, FVC%, and FEF75 (Forced expiratory flow in 75% of forced vital capacity) were significant factors for discriminating subjects without symptoms from those with obstructive lung disease.ConclusionsA reduced FEV1/FVC may be a normal finding in younger-to-middle age male subjects with an FVC% value above the mean predicted value, especially when terminal flow is within the normal range.Copyright © 2019 by Daedalus Enterprises.

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