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postbronchodilator

Postbronchodilator refers to measurements or results obtained after administration of a bronchodilator during pulmonary function testing. It is most commonly used in spirometry to assess the reversibility of airway obstruction.

In practice, baseline spirometry is performed, followed by administration of a bronchodilator (typically an inhaled short-acting

Interpretation commonly uses a criterion that an improvement in FEV1 (forced expiratory volume in one second)

Clinical use includes distinguishing asthma from COPD, guiding treatment decisions, and evaluating disease control or medication

agent
such
as
albuterol/salbutamol).
After
a
standard
waiting
period,
usually
about
10
to
15
minutes,
spirometry
is
repeated.
The
postbronchodilator
results
are
compared
with
the
pre-bronchodilator
values
to
determine
the
degree
of
reversibility.
of
at
least
12%
and
at
least
200
milliliters
from
baseline
indicates
a
positive
postbronchodilator
response.
Some
guidelines
allow
for
age-
or
context-specific
adjustments,
so
exact
criteria
may
vary.
A
substantial
postbronchodilator
response
supports
a
diagnosis
of
reversible
airway
obstruction,
as
often
seen
in
asthma,
whereas
a
minimal
or
absent
response
is
more
typical
of
fixed
obstruction
such
as
some
cases
of
COPD.
effectiveness.
Postbronchodilator
testing
is
also
used
in
research
and
in
certain
occupational
health
assessments.
Limitations
include
dependence
on
patient
effort
during
spirometry,
the
specific
bronchodilator
and
dose
used,
and
that
reversibility
is
not
exclusive
to
one
disease.