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FEV1

Sykesy01 profile image
16 Replies

What does the acronym FEV1 stand for? I know it is to do with a breathing test of some kind. Is it the test where they measure your breath with the machine?. Sorry to be a pain

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Sykesy01
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16 Replies
stone-UK profile image
stone-UK

Hi

Forced Expiratory volume

The amount of air you breath out in one second.

Part of a spirometer test.

Sykesy01 profile image
Sykesy01 in reply tostone-UK

Thank you stone

O2Trees profile image
O2Trees

Never apologise for asking a question Sykesy :)

Sykesy01 profile image
Sykesy01 in reply toO2Trees

Thank you. Ian x

andmikel profile image
andmikel

It is the newest version of Peak Flow which was the measure of the best reading of three when you emptied your lungs as fast as possible. This was measured in Litres per minute. FEV1 is the modern version in Europe and gives the answer in Litres per second. I still use the Mini Wright meter and check daily, It flummoxed me for ages before I sorted it out via WIKIpedia. Names keep changing, like Podiartry has replaced Chiropody. It's just a means of maintaining the mystique to keep the patient one step behind I reckon.

Sykesy01 profile image
Sykesy01 in reply toandmikel

Thank you for the information it's much appreciated.Cheers Ian

O2Trees profile image
O2Trees in reply toandmikel

The correlation between peak flow meters and spirometers is poor, andmikel. PF meters are commonly used for asthma, while spirometry is used for copd. While the peak flow meter measures the amount of air you can blow out, spirometry measures two things, that first big hard blow, then the rest of the air that you can manage to breath out following that, and the results are based on both.

Nobody nowadays would use a peak flow to establish whether you had copd, or its extent - if they did you should be complaining!

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/170...

Sykesy01 profile image
Sykesy01 in reply toO2Trees

Yeah thanks for the information, I had the spirometry's test done for my diagnosis confirmation which showed severe COPD. I am trying to keep away from the oxygen and get by with my nebulizers and inhalers. Cheers Ian

soulsaver profile image
soulsaver

Fev1 is a different measure than Peak Flow.

As Stone said Fev1 is the Forced Expiry Volume in one second. The amount of air you can forcibly expel from your fully inflated lungs in 1 second. As its name implies, it is a volume (not a speed) measured in litres and it is one of several measurements in spirometry.

Peak Flow measures the maximum (peak) speed (flow) of exhalation - is measured in 'litres per minute' and is still used extensively to monitor/predict risk of asthma exacerbation.

Sykesy01 profile image
Sykesy01 in reply tosoulsaver

Thank you for the information? It is very much appreciated. Cheers Ian

O2Trees profile image
O2Trees in reply tosoulsaver

This is really important. I didn't see your clarification SS when i just wrote mine above. Id never realised that the main difference - or one of them - is that one is measurement of volume, and the other of speed.

soulsaver profile image
soulsaver in reply toO2Trees

My comment wasn't aimed at you O2, it was the one above that was just so.. incorrect (...doesn't do it justice).

O2Trees profile image
O2Trees in reply tosoulsaver

I understood that soulsaver, we were both replying about the same incorrect information - I was meaning i might not have written so much if id already seen that you'd got there first, I don't usually go into detail if someone's already done it. :)

Beth1949 profile image
Beth1949

What is considered a good FEV? The higher the number, the better?

jackdup profile image
jackdup in reply toBeth1949

Yes the higher the better but it is dependent on your age, sex, race and height. On a spirometry test they will have a value that is expected for someone of your age, sex, race and height and your result is compared to that and then presented as a percentage of that predicted value. It is that percentage that determines the stage of COPD you have.

Beth1949 profile image
Beth1949 in reply tojackdup

Thank you for the explanation, Beth

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