Cooper C B, Harris N D, Howard P
University Department of Medicine, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield, UK.
Respiration. 1990;57(4):243-7. doi: 10.1159/000195849.
We have evaluated a turbine flow meter (Ventilometer Mark 2, PK Morgan, Kent, UK) at low flow rates and levels of ventilation which are likely to be encountered during exercise in patients with chronic respiratory disease. Pulsatile flows were generated from a volume-cycled mechanical ventilator, the flow wave-form was modified by damping to simulate a human breathing pattern. Comparative measurements of ventilation were made whilst varying tidal volume (VT) from 0.22 to 1.131 and respiratory rate (fR) from 10 to 35 min-1. At lower levels of ventilation the instrument tended to underread especially with increasing fR. The calibration factor must be adjusted to match the level of ventilation if the measurement errors are to be within 5%.