Spirometry variability criteria--association with respiratory morbidity and mortality in a cohort of coal miners.

S E Kellie, M D Attfield, J L Hankinson, R M Castellan
Author Information

Abstract

To clarify the association between spirometry variability and respiratory morbidity and mortality, the authors analyzed data for miners examined in the first round of the National Coal Study, 1969-1971, and they compared groups of miners who failed with those who met each of two spirometry variability criteria: a 5% criterion recommended by the American Thoracic Society, and a 200 ml criterion used in prior research studies. Compared with miners who met the 5% criterion (the best two forced vital capacities must be within 5% or 100 ml of one another), the group that failed had a lower mean for forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), and odds ratios for cough, phlegm, wheeze, shortness of breath, and death of 1.75, 1.67, 1.76, 2.71, and 1.30, respectively. The findings for the 200 ml criterion (the best two FEV1s must be within 200 ml of one another) were somewhat different. The group that failed versus the group that met this criterion had a higher mean for FEV1, and odds ratios for cough, phlegm, wheeze, shortness of breath, and death of 1.13, 1.07, 1.15, 1.43, and 0.94, respectively. Although the findings differ for the two criteria, the findings demonstrate that increased spirometry variability is associated with poorer health.

MeSH Term

Adult
Coal Mining
Cross-Sectional Studies
Epidemiologic Methods
Forced Expiratory Volume
Health Status
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Pneumoconiosis
Risk
Smoking
Spirometry
United States
Vital Capacity

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.01criterionvariabilityminerstwomlspirometryfailedmet5%200onegroupfindingsrespiratorymorbiditymortalitybestforcedmustwithinanothermeanFEV1oddsratioscoughphlegmwheezeshortnessbreathdeathrespectivelyclarifyassociationauthorsanalyzeddataexaminedfirstroundNationalCoalStudy1969-1971comparedgroupscriteria:recommendedAmericanThoracicSocietyusedpriorresearchstudiesComparedvitalcapacities100lowerexpiratoryvolumesecond75677627130FEV1ssomewhatdifferentversushigher13071543094AlthoughdiffercriteriademonstrateincreasedassociatedpoorerhealthSpirometrycriteria--associationcohortcoal

Similar Articles

Cited By