Pulmonary Function Test
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A Pulmonary Function Test (PFT) measures how well your lungs are working — how much air they can hold, how quickly you can move air in and out, and how well oxygen passes from the lungs into your blood. It is the essential test for asthma, COPD, and many other lung conditions. Especially in Delhi, where air quality affects so many people, PFT is one of the most useful and most under-used diagnostic tests we offer.
PFT is not a single test but a set of breathing tests. The most common is spirometry — you breathe into a mouthpiece while a machine measures how much and how fast you can move air. Other components include lung volume measurement (in a sealed chamber) and diffusion capacity (which measures how well oxygen crosses from your lungs into your blood). In some cases, the test is repeated after you inhale a bronchodilator (an asthma puffer) to see whether airway narrowing reverses. This is called a reversibility test.
Basic spirometry: 15 to 20 minutes. With reversibility testing (post-bronchodilator): 30 to 45 minutes. A full PFT panel (with lung volumes and diffusion): 45 to 60 minutes.
You sit on a chair. A soft clip is placed on your nose to make sure all the air goes through your mouth. You wrap your lips tightly around a mouthpiece. The technician will coach you through the breaths — usually a slow, full breath in, then a hard, fast blast out, then a long steady continued exhale until your lungs are empty. Each manoeuvre lasts 6 to 10 seconds and is repeated several times to ensure reliable results.
If reversibility is being tested, you inhale a bronchodilator (usually salbutamol) and the spirometry is repeated 15 minutes later. The test takes effort. You may feel a little dizzy or breathless during the harder manoeuvres — this is normal and passes quickly.
PFT results are compared with predicted normal values for your age, sex, and height. The key numbers are FEV1 (how much air you can blow out in 1 second), FVC (total air you can blow out), and the FEV1/FVC ratio.
An obstructive pattern (asthma, COPD) shows reduced FEV1 with a low FEV1/FVC ratio. A restrictive pattern (lung scarring, chest wall problems) shows reduced FVC with a normal ratio. Reversibility — improvement after a bronchodilator — points strongly towards asthma. Your pulmonologist will interpret the full picture.
No, but it is effortful. You will need to blow hard and long several times. Some people find this tiring; brief dizziness is normal and passes quickly.
Yes, usually from around age 6 or 7, when they can reliably follow the coaching. For younger children, other tests are used.
Some lung conditions are detected before symptoms become obvious — especially in long-term smokers or people with significant air pollution exposure. Early detection means earlier, more effective treatment.
Sometimes — that is the point. Stopping certain inhalers before the test helps the team see how your lungs behave without medication. Don't stop anything without specific instructions.
It depends. People with stable asthma or COPD may have one every 1 to 2 years. After major treatment changes, sooner. Your pulmonologist will recommend the right interval.
Breathing tests measuring lung volumes and airflow