masterThesis
Avaliação muscular respiratória: adaptação do mano vacuômetro nacional para a avaliação da pressão inspiratória nasal e nível de intensidade da ventilação voluntária máxima em sujeitos saudáveis
Fecha
2010-05-18Registro en:
SEVERINO, Fernanda Gadelha. Avaliação muscular respiratória: adaptação do mano vacuômetro nacional para a avaliação da pressão inspiratória nasal e nível de intensidade da ventilação voluntária máxima em sujeitos saudáveis. 2010. 100 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Movimento e Saúde) - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2010.
Autor
Severino, Fernanda Gadelha
Resumen
The clinical importance of evaluating the respiratory muscles with a variety of tests
has been proposed by several studies, once that the combination of several tests
would allow a better diagnosis and therefore, a better clinical follow of disorders of
the respiratory muscles. This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of adapting a
national electronic manovacuometer to measure the nasal inspiratory pressure (study
1) and analyze the level of load intensity of maximum voluntary ventilation, as well as
the variables that may influence this maneuver in healthy subjects (study 2). We
studied 20 healthy subjects by a random evaluation of two measures of SNIP in
different equipments: a national and an imported. In study 2 it was analyzed the
intensity of the load of MVV test, change in pressure developed during the maneuver,
the possible differences between genders, and the correlations between the flow
developed in the test and the result of MVV. In study 1 it was found the average for
both measures of nasal inspiratory pressures: 125 ± 42.4 cmH2O for the imported
equipment and 131.7 ± 28.7 cmH2O for the national one. Pearson analysis showed a
significant correlation between the average, with a coefficient r = 0.63. The average
values showed no significant differences evaluated by paired t test (p> 0.05). In the
Bland-Altman analysis it was found a BIAS = 7 cmH2O, SD 32.9 and a confidence
interval of - 57.5 cmH2O up to 71.5 cmH2O. In the second study it was found
significant differences between the genders in the air volume moved, being higher in
males 150.9 ± 13.1 l / min vs 118.5 ± 15.7 L / min for (p = 0.0002, 95% CI 44.85 to
20:05). Regarding the inspiratory and expiratory loading, they were significantly
higher in men than in women, peak inspiratory pressure (34.7 ± 5.3 cmH2O vs 19.5 ±
4.2 cmH2O, 95% CI - 18.0 to -12.3, p <0.0001), peak expiratory (33.8 vs. 23.1 ± 5.9
cmH2O ± 5.4 cmH2O, 95% CI -17.1 to - 4.6, p <0.0001), and the delta pressure (59.7
± 10 cmH2O vs 36.8 ± 8.3 cmH2O, 95% CI 14.5 to 31.2, p <0.0002). The Pearson
correlation showed that the flow generated by the maneuver is strongly correlated
with the delta-expiratory pressure / inspiratory (r2= 0.83,R = 0.91, 95%IC 0.72 a 0.97
e p< 0.0001).Through these results we suggest that the national electronic
manovacuometer is feasible and safe to perform the sniff test in healthy subjects. For
the MVV, there are differences between the genders in the intensity of pressure
developed during the maneuver. We found a load intensity considered low during the
MVV, and found a strong correlation between the flow generated in the test and the
delta pressure expiratory / inspiratory