Normal values of respiratory oscillometry in South African children and adolescents

Author:

Chaya ShaakiraORCID,MacGinty Rae,Jacobs Carvern,Githinji Leah,Hlengwa Sipho,Simpson Shannon J,Zar Heather J,Hantos ZoltanORCID,Gray Diane MORCID

Abstract

IntroductionNon-invasive measurement of respiratory impedance by oscillometry can be used in young children from 3 years and those unable to perform forced respiratory manoeuvres. It can discriminate between healthy children and those with respiratory disease. However, its clinical application is limited by the lack of reference data for African paediatric populations.AimTo develop reference equations for oscillometry outcomes in South African children and adolescents.MethodsHealthy subjects, enrolled in the Drakenstein Child Health Study, HIV uninfected adolescents in the Cape Town Adolescent Antiretroviral Cohort and healthy children attending surgical outpatient clinics at Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital were measured with conventional spectral (6–32 Hz) and intra-breath (10 Hz) oscillometry. Stepwise linear regression was used to assess the relationship between respiratory variables and anthropometric predictors (height, sex, ancestry) to generate reference equations.ResultsA total of 692 subjects, 48.4% female, median age of 5.2 years (range: 3–17 years) were included. The median interquartile range (IQR) for weight for age z-score and height for age z-score was −0.42 (−1.11; 0.35) and −0.65 (−1.43; 0.35), respectively. Stepwise regression demonstrated that all the variables were significantly dependent on height only. Comparison to previous reference data indicated slightly higher resistance and lower compliance values in the smallest children.ConclusionWe established the first respiratory oscillometry reference equations for African children and adolescents, which will facilitate use in early identification and management of respiratory disease. Our results suggest differences in oscillometry measures by ancestry but also highlight the lack of standardisation in methodology.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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