what are the actual figures in a peak flow representative of are they just a basic grade with no relevance to anything else
peak flow : what are the actual figures... - Asthma Community ...
peak flow
Hi NLGA. I’m not sure I understand what you mean. Peak flow measures the amount of air, in litres, you can blow out of your lungs in one fast breath.
yes but what is for example the 600 what does it mean is it just a made up grade or relevant to a actual grade or could it be 6 in a 1-10
Hi NLGA. I do know that your personal Peak flow is measured by weight height etc , I'm a small female so obviously my lungs are small as well. My predicated peak flow for my frame and age is 320, if I have an asthma flaire and I drop to say 240 I know I need help. Usually a course of steriods. Hope this helps x
thank you but I’m trying to understand what the 240 in your case represents
As my Peak Flow should be 320 on the Doctors scale for my build, it means that if I can only achieve 240 into the peak flow I am blowing under my expected target so my lungs aren't working to capacity therefor I need medical advice. As another person suggested look online for the peak flow chart. You can work out yourself from the chart by putting in your age, height and weight. If your not able to do this ask your Asthma nurse for advice. Good luck .
I see what you mean, but other than knowing it’s measured in litres, I’m afraid I don’t know. Interesting point…
I thought that but reading the spirometer test that seems to be around 3 litres so I thought I’d 300 on the peak the same as 3 on the spiro
This may help:
it’s more what the numbers mean what are they a grade of
They’re not a grade of anything - they are your actual volume of expired air measured in litres per minute (as shown on the vertical axis on the left of the graph). The graph shows the average reading for people of a specific gender, age and height. Anything below 80% of this reading would be considered a potential problem, but there will always be perfectly healthy people outside the normal range (which is actually 80-120% - some people have amazing lungs!).
Hope that helps.
Hi, if you look on the interwebby , there are charts, based on your sex, height and age, that give a max and min for a normal reading.
We are all different, but it gives a benchmark. Sadly even healthy lunged folk have a reduced peak flow as they age. I downloaded one and keep it on my laptop for quick reference if I need it. A chart, not an older person 😆
yes but it’s what the numbers relate to is what I am trying to find out
as several people have already said it is the measure of the volume of air in litres that you are able to expel in a forced expiration. Not sure why you dont seem to understand ?!
I appreciate the replies have been rude and I have addressed that but this could have been phrased more tactfully. Please can you both remember community guidelines and keep things civil: healthunlocked.com/asthmalu...
•Keep your messages civil, tasteful and relevant
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It's the rate of flow of expelled air through your bronchi. So if you imagine a pipe, a wide pipe will allow more air through than a narrow one. It is a way to measure how constricted your airway is.
that’s interesting kind of a puzzle as the spirometer is in litres but a different number system
I only know what my best is and at what level I need to get help.So much information just confuses me. I just keep it simple.
I know what my peak flow and oxygen levels should be and that's enough for my brain .
HI, as others have said it isn't a grade, it's how much air you can expel in a set time. That value changes depending on your age, sex, and height (you would expect for example a 25 year old man who is 5'11 to be able to blow out much more, and so have a higher best peak flow value, than a 70 year old woman who is 5'2").
However, there are also individual variations, depending on things like whether you're a current or ex smoker, or whether you did a lot of sports when you were younger. The predicted values on the charts are a start, but you need to work out what your own best value is and use that - it might be lower or higher than the charts. I have severe asthma but mine is much higher than predicted, probably because I used to sing and play the oboe as a child.
The important thing is to compare your readings against yourself, never anyone else. That 25 year old man I mentioned might be having an attack and need hospital at the exact same peak flow reading that's really good for the 70 year old woman.
This post might help with more information about peak flow: healthunlocked.com/asthmauk...
I would say the number must correspond to various volumes but I don't know what those volumes are. This must be available on the Internet though, possibly on a research paper. Good question though!
I recently asked my respiratory consultant about what my peak flow should be. And he said it should be about 400. Considering I only have 80% lung capacity thanks to covid. I do regular peak flow readings.. I have just had a flare up where my readings went down to 230 and then I contacted my gp who acted quickly and started me on steroids, and antibiotics and also increased my ventolin usage to a regime that we have found that works . Luckily I have an appointment with my consultant in the next couple of days. However my peak flow have started to increase
let’s hope that increase continues
Could I ask how you found out your lung capacity is covid related as I believe that’s what has increased my asthma / breathing issues but I can’t get my GP to think the same
I had covid very badly in 2020. And had pneumonia on top of that. I was in hospital with covid. They did a CT scan an found lesions on my lungs that my respiratory consultant said were due to covid. I was not asthmatic before covid. Covid has caused all my lung problems and it took almost a year for it to stabilize. Luckily I have a excellent gp and good consultant
***Moderator here: Editing this as rude replies have been removed***
as several people have said it is not about grades....
It's litres volume expelled per minute. I know we don't exhale for a minute in the test, which is short and sharp, but there has to be a universal baseline measurement as each test exhale can't be the same length of time. The litres measurement was adopted EU wide, I seem to remember a different scale in the UK before that as I had to get a new PF meter.
Please can everyone remember community guidelines and keep things civil: healthunlocked.com/asthmalu...
•Keep your messages civil, tasteful and relevant
•Maintain respect for other people