Raised respiratory rate in elderly patients: a valuable physical sign
Raised respiratory rate in elderly patients: a valuable physical sign
Measurements of respiratory rate in 82 long-stay patients aged 67-101 years yielded a normal range of 16-25 breaths a minute. In a prospective study of 60 consecutive acute admissions to a geriatric unit, 19 out of 21 patients diagnosed as lower respiratory tract infections had respiratory rates above the upper limit of normal on the day of diagnosis; the rise in respiratory rate preceded the clinical diagnosis. All eight patients who were diagnosed on admission as having a lower respiratory tract infection had a respiratory rate greater than 26, with a mean of 29.7 breaths a minute. Patients admitted for other conditions-for example, urinary tract infection-rarely had respiratory rates outside the normal range. Accurate measurement of respiratory rate is a valuable diagnostic aid in elderly patients.
Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Respiration, Respiratory Tract Infections/physiopathology, Time Factors, Urinary Tract Infections/physiopathology
626-627
McFadden, J P
67c691b5-445d-41de-9892-d49de78d6e30
Price, R C
37cd0be4-afda-48d1-b3c7-10c1fbb3efb0
Eastwood, H D
1270e801-bbaa-45f7-b7f1-de173e2070d0
Briggs, R S
a6b65ef0-e90c-4c07-bf5b-b70130c128b3
27 February 1982
McFadden, J P
67c691b5-445d-41de-9892-d49de78d6e30
Price, R C
37cd0be4-afda-48d1-b3c7-10c1fbb3efb0
Eastwood, H D
1270e801-bbaa-45f7-b7f1-de173e2070d0
Briggs, R S
a6b65ef0-e90c-4c07-bf5b-b70130c128b3
McFadden, J P, Price, R C, Eastwood, H D and Briggs, R S
(1982)
Raised respiratory rate in elderly patients: a valuable physical sign.
British Medical Journal (Clinical research ed.), 284 (6316), , [284].
(doi:10.1136/bmj.284.6316.626).
Abstract
Measurements of respiratory rate in 82 long-stay patients aged 67-101 years yielded a normal range of 16-25 breaths a minute. In a prospective study of 60 consecutive acute admissions to a geriatric unit, 19 out of 21 patients diagnosed as lower respiratory tract infections had respiratory rates above the upper limit of normal on the day of diagnosis; the rise in respiratory rate preceded the clinical diagnosis. All eight patients who were diagnosed on admission as having a lower respiratory tract infection had a respiratory rate greater than 26, with a mean of 29.7 breaths a minute. Patients admitted for other conditions-for example, urinary tract infection-rarely had respiratory rates outside the normal range. Accurate measurement of respiratory rate is a valuable diagnostic aid in elderly patients.
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Published date: 27 February 1982
Keywords:
Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Prospective Studies, Respiration, Respiratory Tract Infections/physiopathology, Time Factors, Urinary Tract Infections/physiopathology
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Local EPrints ID: 479659
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479659
ISSN: 0267-0623
PURE UUID: 5e1bbac7-d1e1-4ac4-8c72-a85db7879c05
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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 16:44
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:42
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Author:
J P McFadden
Author:
R C Price
Author:
H D Eastwood
Author:
R S Briggs
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