Hilberg Ole
Department of Environmental and Occupational Medicine, University of Aarhus, Denmark.
Allergy. 2002;57 Suppl 70:5-39. doi: 10.1046/j.0908-665x.2001.all.doc.x.
Nasal congestion is an important symptom in many diseases of the upper airways. Nasal congestion may also affect personal well-being and quality of life. Furthermore, as the nasal mucosa is the first part of the airways in contact with the environment, objective evaluation of nasal congestion or nasal patency is important. Systematic evaluation of nasal patency was described in the last part of the 19th century by Zwaardemaker. Measurement of the pressure drop over the nasal cavity at a passive dow has been described in 1903 by Courtade and is one of first descriptions rhinomanometry. The technique is still in use and computer technology has made the measurements much easier but the method has not yet been accepted for wide clinical use.
Acoustic methods have also been used for evaluation of nasal patency. A qualitative method was the hum-test by Spiess (1902), where external occlusion of the nonocciuded side of the nasal cavity is experienced as a change in the timbre of the sound during humming. Acoustic reflections have been used in geophysical investigations especially with regard to search for oil. The use of acoustic reflections from the airways gained special interest in 1960-70 for determining the geometry of the vocal tract shape with regard to speech reconstruction. A method described by A. Jackson (1977) was adopted and for the first time applied to the nasal cavity. The method for determining the cross-sectional area as function of distance in the airways by acoustic reflections is impulse or relatively simple. The incident sound pseudorandom noise in the audible frequency range is compared with the response - the reflections from the airways. Intuitively, if the size of the entrance to the airways is known, the size of the reflections may represent changes of the airway size and the time between reflections may give the distance between the changes, dependent on the speed of sound. In this way it is possible to determine the area as function of distance in the airways. The technique has some assumptions and the major effort has been to validate use in the nose and elucidate aspects with regard to sound loss in the airways and resolution. Therefore, the acoustic reflection technique - named acoustic rhinometry - was compared with other methods like MRI, CT, and rhinomanometry. Allergic and nonallergic subjects were also compared.
Acoustic rhinometry showed reasonable correlation with CT in a cadaver and in 10 subjects in comparison with MRI for the first 6 cm of the nasal cavity. Models based on MRI scannings of subjects also showed good correlation for the first 6 cm of the nasal cavity. Posteriorly in the nasal cavity and the epipharynx, differences were found mainly due to 'sound loss' to the paranasal sinuses. Sound loss due to viscous loss or friction at increasing surface/area ratio (the complex geometry in the nose) and loss due to nonrigidity the nasal mucosa were also examined. Neither these factors affected the area-distance function significantly. Acoustic rhinometry seems to reflect the area-distance function in the nose reasonably accurately. In allergic subjects acoustic rhinometry has been used to evaluate hypersensitivity. More pronounced spontaneous variation in nasal mucosa congestion was found in patients suffering from hay fever compared to nonallergic subjects. Furthermore, a tendency to a more swollen mucosa in the allergic subjects compared to the normal state, and increased sensitivity to histamine was found. This and reduction in swelling of the mucosa in allergic subjects during nasal steroid treatment out of the pollen season indicate an ongoing inflammatory process or hypersensitivity in allergic subjects out ot the pollen season. During allergen challenge the change in nasal cavity dimension as well as inflammation may affect olfaction in hay fever patients.
Acoustic rhinometry has not only been used to examine hay fever patients but in many different aspects of rhinology. Since the introduction of the acoustic reflection technique in the nose more than papers using the technique have been published. Most of the papers find the technique valuable for evaluation of nasal patency. Fortunately, some critical papers have drawn attention to some practical aspects of the technique. Standard operating procedures, and calibration checks as well as training operators will enhance the accuracy and reproducibility of results.
A decade after its introduction acoustic rhinometry is a well-established method for evaluation of nasal patency, but further improvement can be obtained by continued validation and adjustments of the technique.
鼻塞是上呼吸道多种疾病的重要症状。鼻塞还可能影响个人幸福感和生活质量。此外,由于鼻粘膜是气道与环境接触的第一部分,对鼻塞或鼻通畅度进行客观评估很重要。19世纪末,兹瓦德马克对鼻通畅度进行了系统评估。1903年,库尔塔德描述了在被动气流下测量鼻腔压力降的方法,这是鼻阻力测量法的最早描述之一。该技术仍在使用,计算机技术使测量变得更加容易,但该方法尚未被广泛应用于临床。
声学方法也被用于评估鼻通畅度。一种定性方法是斯皮斯(1902年)的哼唱测试,即当鼻腔未堵塞侧被外部堵塞时,哼唱时声音的音色会发生变化。声学反射已用于地球物理勘探,特别是在寻找石油方面。20世纪60至70年代,气道声学反射在语音重建中用于确定声道形状的几何结构引起了特别关注。A.杰克逊(1977年)描述的一种方法被采用并首次应用于鼻腔。通过声学反射确定气道中横截面积与距离函数关系的方法是脉冲法或相对简单的方法。将可听频率范围内的入射声伪随机噪声与响应——气道反射进行比较。直观地说,如果知道气道入口的大小,反射的大小可能代表气道大小的变化,反射之间的时间可能给出变化之间的距离,这取决于声速。通过这种方式,可以确定气道中横截面积与距离的函数关系。该技术有一些假设,主要工作是验证其在鼻腔中的应用,并阐明气道中的声损失和分辨率方面的问题。因此,将声学反射技术——称为声学鼻测量法——与MRI、CT和鼻阻力测量法等其他方法进行了比较。还比较了过敏和非过敏受试者。
在一具尸体以及10名受试者中,声学鼻测量法显示与CT在前6厘米鼻腔内的结果有合理相关性,与MRI相比也是如此。基于受试者MRI扫描的模型在前6厘米鼻腔内也显示出良好的相关性。在鼻腔后部和鼻咽部,发现差异主要是由于声音向鼻窦的“损失”。还研究了由于表面/面积比增加(鼻腔复杂的几何结构)导致的粘性损失或摩擦引起的声损失以及鼻粘膜非刚性引起的损失。这些因素均未对面积-距离函数产生显著影响。声学鼻测量法似乎能相当准确地反映鼻腔中的面积-距离函数。在过敏受试者中,声学鼻测量法已用于评估超敏反应情况。与非过敏受试者相比,花粉症患者鼻粘膜充血的自发变化更为明显。此外,与正常状态相比,过敏受试者的粘膜有更肿胀的趋势,并且对组胺的敏感性增加。这以及花粉季节外鼻腔类固醇治疗期间过敏受试者粘膜肿胀的减轻表明,花粉季节外过敏受试者存在持续的炎症过程或超敏反应。在过敏原激发期间,鼻腔尺寸的变化以及炎症可能会影响花粉症患者的嗅觉。
声学鼻测量法不仅用于检查花粉症患者,还用于鼻科学的许多不同方面。自从将声学反射技术引入鼻腔以来,已经发表了多篇使用该技术的论文。大多数论文认为该技术对评估鼻通畅度很有价值。幸运的是,一些批判性论文已经引起了人们对该技术一些实际方面的关注。标准操作程序、校准检查以及培训操作人员将提高结果的准确性和可重复性。
声学鼻测量法在引入十年后,已成为评估鼻通畅度的成熟方法,但通过持续验证和调整该技术仍可进一步改进。