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peak flow

icefisherman

New member
i'm just curious. I haven't had pft's in years but have had a few peak flows at my fam. doctor. Using the red one i'm getting between 150 and 200 wich seems kinda low. i'm 5'8 120lbs i know there is a chart for this somewhere.
thanks!
Ben
 

anonymous

New member
Hey Ben,
Go to <a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://www.fpnotebook.com/LUN97.htm
">http://www.fpnotebook.com/LUN97.htm
</a>
It will give you values based on your age and height.
 

anonymous

New member
Know that it's better to track a number of your peak flows including your best values and use this to look at how your peak flow is. At age 25 (w/ cf). The value that this chart predicts for me is actually in my red zone for peak flow. So, it's much better to stick with information relative to you than relative to an average person.
 

lightNlife

New member
Merely using a peak flow meter isn't as useful in determining how well you're doing as a full PFT would be. When I first started attending the adult CF clinic (after having gone to a pediatrician for 23 years) they said that FEV1 values are what we should concentrate on. I've noticed that I can run consistently high peak flows (>120%) even when my FEV1 has dropped to 1.3L
 

ladybug

New member
<div class="FTQUOTE"><begin quote><i>Originally posted by: <b>lightNlife</b></i>

Merely using a peak flow meter isn't as useful in determining how well you're doing as a full PFT would be. When I first started attending the adult CF clinic (after having gone to a pediatrician for 23 years) they said that FEV1 values are what we should concentrate on. I've noticed that I can run consistently high peak flows (>120%) even when my FEV1 has dropped to 1.3L</end quote></div>

To add to that, I recently asked my RT at the clinic about Peak Flows so I could track my own lung volumes between visits and she wouldn't even give me one. She said they are completely unreliable and inconsistent. Although she does not have CF, she said she did one reading, sat around, did another reading, sat around, and did another reading and though she was trying to keep her breathing steady, all the readings were completely different. That means, in her opinion, even when taking the readings in the same sitting, you can get extremely different results (different than when you do PFTs and they should remain fairly consistent.) Also, she said their asthma doc at the University would not even use Peak Flows. So, just an FYI... some people think they're not reliable at all.
 

anonymous

New member
Also, peak flow meters cannot help differentiate between tightness in larger airways vs. small airways. Sometimes the smaller ones are doing poorly but the peak flow meter (operated mostly by using larger airways) still indicates a high flow. Very deceptive and unreliable.
 

icefisherman

New member
I was just wondering what the numbers were. I stopped going to a cf doc, and seeing cf docs about 7 years ago. I'm finally getting things started to see a cf doc again. I know peak flows aren't set in stone, and wasn't trying to use it as a reference to my health. i'll know more when i get my pft's again.
Thanks again for the chart!
Ben
 
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