Comparison of the classic and Broms methods of rhinomanometry using model noses.

Eur Arch Otorhinolaryngol

Common Cold Centre and Healthcare Clinical Trials, Cardiff School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff, CF10 3AX, Wales, UK,

Published: January 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Different methods, specifically the classic method at 75 and 150 Pa and the Broms method at radius 200, are used to measure nasal airway resistance (NAR) via rhinomanometry.
  • A study compared unilateral NAR values across four artificial nose models (R1 to R4) and found that measurements varied significantly between methods based on the level of nasal resistance (low vs high).
  • Clinicians should exercise caution when comparing NAR measurements from the classic and Broms methods, as results can differ significantly depending on the specific resistance levels being analyzed.

Article Abstract

Calculation of nasal airway resistance (NAR) using rhinomanometry can be obtained using different methods of analysis of the pressure-flow curve. The two commonest methods for measuring NAR in rhinomanometry are the classic method at 75 and 150 Pa and the Broms method at radius 200. The objective of this study was to compare the unilateral NAR values measured using both classic and Broms method over four artificial model noses (R1, R2, R3 and R4). The study found that at low resistances (R1 and R2), NAR measurements of Broms were not significantly different from measurements of classic method at 75 Pa but were significantly different from measurements of classic method at 150 Pa. At high resistances (R3 and R4), NAR measurements of Broms were not significantly different from measurements of classic method at 150 Pa but were significantly different from measurements of classic method at 75 Pa. The magnitude of any change in resistance due to surgery or medical intervention is therefore also dependent on the method used to analyze the pressure-flow curves, with bigger change observed in Broms method at certain level of nasal resistances compared to classic measurements in the same patient. In conclusion, nasal airway resistance is not a standardized measurement like blood pressure. Clinicians need to be careful when comparing unilateral measurements of resistance from the classic and Broms methods because the two methods can give either similar or different measurements depending on the level of nasal resistance.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00405-014-3083-6DOI Listing

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