Publication | Open Access
Raised respiratory rate in elderly patients: a valuable physical sign.
137
Citations
3
References
1982
Year
Pulmonary CareAgingElderly PatientsEpidemiology Of AgingHospital MedicineClinical EpidemiologyPhysical AgingRespiratory InfectionClinical DiagnosisPublic HealthAcute MedicineGeriatricsVentilationAcute CarePulmonary MedicineRespiration (Physiology)Pulmonary DiseaseRespiratory RatePulmonary PhysiologyInfectious Respiratory DiseaseLung MechanicsMedicine
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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