Cb. Sherman et al., COGNITIVE FUNCTION AND SPIROMETRY PERFORMANCE IN THE ELDERLY, The American review of respiratory disease, 148(1), 1993, pp. 123-126
A total of 65 ambulatory subjects over the age of 65 yr were studied t
o determine if mild impairment in cognitive function precludes reliabl
e spirometric measures in the aged. Standardized questionnaires were u
sed to obtain information on demographics, cigarette smoking, respirat
ory symptoms, and physician-diagnosed lung disease. Each subject perfo
rmed several simple standardized tasks of cognitive function and under
went spirometric testing. A total of 36 women and 29 men participated.
The mean age for the group was 74.9 +/- 5.6 yr; most were nonsmokers
(never smokers, n = 28; former smokers, n = 29; and current smokers, n
= 8). Of the 65 participants, 8 (12.3%) individuals were unable to pe
rform at least three ATS-acceptable FVC maneuvers after suitable demon
stration. These subjects were similar to the 57 subjects able to perfo
rm three acceptable maneuvers, except for worse scores on both the sym
bol-digit modalities test (23.3 +/- 3.6 versus 31.6 +/- 10.5, p < 0.00
1) and the trail-making test, Part B (244.3 +/- 87.1 versus 160.4 +/-
71.8, p < 0.01). Of the 57 subjects able to perform spirometry, 18 (31
.6%) failed to meet ATS reproducibility criteria for FEV1, FVC, or bot
h. Cognitive impairment was not associated with the ability to achieve
reproducible measures. These results suggest that the vast majority o
f older subjects can perform reliable spirometry; those elderly unable
to perform spirometry may have impairment in cognitive function requi
ring further evaluation.