When flow-volume loops get kinky

One of the more recognizable flow-volume loop contours is the one associated with severe airway obstruction. Specifically, this type of loop shows an abrupt decrease in flow rate following the peak flow with a more gradual decrease in flow rates during the remainder of the exhalation.

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This abrupt decrease in flow rates was first described on a volume-time curve and the inflection point was called a “kink” but this point also corresponds with the inflection point on the flow-volume loop. This feature has also been called a “notch” or a “spike” but a number of researchers have called this the Airway Collapse pattern (AC) and it is more formally defined as a sharp decrease in flow rate from peak flow to a discontinuity point at less than 50% of the peak flow and occurring within the first 25% of the exhaled vital capacity.

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