Shavonica,
To answer you question vaguely. There are 3 parts to a full PFT. Spirometry, Plethysomography(body box), and diffusion. The first thing to remember is that maybe with the exception of asthma you can't "diagnose" a disease with a PFT, it is only a piece to the diagnostic puzzle.
The spirometry has 3-4 numbers doc's concern themselves with;FEV1, FVC, FEV1/FVC and FEF 25%-75% and sometimes PEF(peak expiratory flow). As important as the nummbers is graph that it makes, a sort of lop sided loop. You can notice a disease process just by looking at the loop.
FEV1 is the amount exhaled in 1 sec- tells ostructive lung disease, normal >80,mild 67-79, moderate 55-66, <55 severe
FVC the amount of air you can get it, tells restrictive disease, use above values
FEV1/FVC determines how one process effects the other, example we are obtructive first, mulitple infections cause fibrosis causing restriction second
FEF 25-75 is a hard one to look at because it is sort of vague>60% is considered normal, ithe middle half off the test, mid-small airways.
PEF tells obstruction as well, it also tells the tech doing your test your effort level, so they can tell if someone is "cheating", awful I know but someone trying to get black lung money will do it!
Plethysmography shows lung volumes and resistance, this is very useful in conjunction with spirometry. This breaks down further by "section" for lung volumes and can help determine disease involvement
Diffusion shows oxygen transport through the lung, your either normal or not, ours is normally high because of bloody sputum.
It is hard to break it down over an email, if you have results you want my advise on let me know.
Keep in mind when doc's look at ours they are not diagnosing but trending for treatment effectiveness and need.
Luke.