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Did you know using an Incentive Spirometer can help your lungs gain strength?

What is an Incentive Spirometer?

An Incentive Spirometer is a handheld device that helps the lungs to recover after a surgery or lung illness. Using this device can help the lungs stay active, free of fluid and even maintain it's strength.

  • An incentive spirometer is often given to people who’ve recently had surgery, people with lung disease, or people with conditions that fill their lungs with fluid.
  • Your doctor might even give a spirometer to take home after leaving the hospital post-surgery (only if your health condition requires it).
  • Incentive spirometry is commonly used to break up the fluid that builds up in the lungs in people with pneumonia.

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Did you know using an Incentive Spirometer can help your lungs gain strength? Pic Courtesy: Pixabay

New Delhi: An Incentive Spirometer is a handheld device that helps the lungs to recover after a surgery or lung illness. Using this device can help the lungs stay active, free of fluid and even maintain it's strength.

How does it work?

When you breathe from an incentive spirometer, a piston rises inside the device and measures the volume of your breath. A healthcare provider can set a target breath volume for you to hit.

This device is commonly used at the hospitals post surgeries or prolonged illnesses that leads to an extended bed rest. Your doctor or surgeon may also give you a take-home spirometer after surgery.

Breathing slowly with a spirometer allows your lungs to inflate fully. These breaths helps in breaking up the fluid inside the lungs that can lead to pneumonia if it isn’t cleared.

Who needs to use an incentive spirometer?

An incentive spirometer is often given to the people who’ve recently had surgery, people with lung disease, or people with conditions that fill their lungs with fluid.

  • After surgery: An incentive spirometer can keep the lungs active during bed rest. Keeping the lungs active with a spirometer is thought to lower the risk of developing complications like atelectasis, pneumonia, bronchospasm and respiratory failure.
  • Pneumonia: Incentive spirometry is commonly used to break up the fluid that builds up in the lungs in people with pneumonia.
  • Chronic obstuctive pulmonary disease (COPD): COPD is a group of respiratory disorders that are most commonly caused by smoking. There’s no current cure, but quitting smoking, using a spirometer, and following an exercise plan can help manage symptoms.
  • Cystic fibrosis: People with cystic fibrosis might benefit from using an incentive spirometer to clear fluid buildup. A 2015 study found that spirometry has the potential to reduce pressure in the chest cavity and lower the chance of central airway collapse.
  • Other conditions: A doctor may also recommend an incentive spirometer for people with sickle cell anaemia, asthma, or atelectasis.

The Benefits of an Incentive Spirometer:

  • Improves lung function
  • Reduces mucus buildup
  • Strengthens the lungs during extended rest
  • Lowers the chance of developing lung infections

Your doctor might even give a spirometer to take home after leaving the hospital post-surgery (only if your health condition requires it). 

People with conditions that affect the lungs, like COPD, may also use the instrument to keep their lungs fluid-free and active.

PLEASE NOTE: An aggressive use of the incentive spirometer can lead to lung damage, such as collapsed lungs. You may feel dizzy or lightheaded when breathing from your spirometer. If you feel like you’re going to faint, stop and take several normal breaths before continuing. If symptoms persists or if you feel any kind of pain while deep breathing then contact your doctor immediately.