Impact of pulmonary rehabilitation on the major dimensions of dyspnea in COPD

The evaluation of dyspnea and its responsiveness to therapy in COPD should consider the multidimensional nature of this symptom in each of its sensory-perceptual (intensity, quality), affective and impact domains. To gain new insights into mechanisms of dyspnea relief following pulmonary rehabilitat...

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Main Authors: Karin Wadell, Katherine A. Webb, Megan E. Preston, Naparat Amornputtisathaporn, Lorelei Samis, Jennifer Patelli, Jordan A. Guenette, Denis E. O'Donnell
Other Authors: Queen's University, Kingston
Format: Article
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/32236
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spelling th-mahidol.322362018-10-19T12:20:04Z Impact of pulmonary rehabilitation on the major dimensions of dyspnea in COPD Karin Wadell Katherine A. Webb Megan E. Preston Naparat Amornputtisathaporn Lorelei Samis Jennifer Patelli Jordan A. Guenette Denis E. O'Donnell Queen's University, Kingston Umea Universitet Mahidol University Department of Rehabilitation Medicine The evaluation of dyspnea and its responsiveness to therapy in COPD should consider the multidimensional nature of this symptom in each of its sensory-perceptual (intensity, quality), affective and impact domains. To gain new insights into mechanisms of dyspnea relief following pulmonary rehabilitation (PR), we examined effects on the major domains of dyspnea and their interaction with physiological training effects. This randomized, controlled study was conducted in 48 subjects with COPD. Subjects received either 8-weeks of PR or usual care (CTRL). Pre- and post-intervention assessments included: sensory-perceptual (i.e., exertional dyspnea intensity, dyspnea descriptors at end-exercise), affective (i.e., intensity of breathing-related anxiety during exercise, COPD self-efficacy, walking self-efficacy) and impact (i.e., activity-related dyspnea measured by the Baseline/Transition Dyspnea Index, Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire dyspnea component, St. George's Respiratory Disease Questionnaire activity component) domains of dyspnea; functional performance (i.e., 6-minute walk, endurance shuttle walk); pulmonary function; and physiological measurements during constant work rate cycle exercise at 75% of the peak incremental work rate. Forty-one subjects completed the study: PR (n = 17) and CTRL (n = 24) groups were well matched for age, sex, body size and pulmonary function. There were no significant between-group differences in pre- to post-intervention changes in pulmonary function or physiological parameters during exercise. After PR versus CTRL, significant improvements were found in the affective and impact domains but not in the sensory-perceptual domain of dyspnea. In conclusion, clinically meaningful improvements in the affective and impact domains of dyspnea occurred in response to PR in the absence of consistent physiological training effects. © 2013 Informa Healthcare USA, Inc. 2018-10-19T05:20:04Z 2018-10-19T05:20:04Z 2013-08-01 Article COPD: Journal of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. Vol.10, No.4 (2013), 425-435 10.3109/15412555.2012.758696 15412563 15412555 2-s2.0-84880729582 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/32236 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84880729582&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Karin Wadell
Katherine A. Webb
Megan E. Preston
Naparat Amornputtisathaporn
Lorelei Samis
Jennifer Patelli
Jordan A. Guenette
Denis E. O'Donnell
Impact of pulmonary rehabilitation on the major dimensions of dyspnea in COPD
description The evaluation of dyspnea and its responsiveness to therapy in COPD should consider the multidimensional nature of this symptom in each of its sensory-perceptual (intensity, quality), affective and impact domains. To gain new insights into mechanisms of dyspnea relief following pulmonary rehabilitation (PR), we examined effects on the major domains of dyspnea and their interaction with physiological training effects. This randomized, controlled study was conducted in 48 subjects with COPD. Subjects received either 8-weeks of PR or usual care (CTRL). Pre- and post-intervention assessments included: sensory-perceptual (i.e., exertional dyspnea intensity, dyspnea descriptors at end-exercise), affective (i.e., intensity of breathing-related anxiety during exercise, COPD self-efficacy, walking self-efficacy) and impact (i.e., activity-related dyspnea measured by the Baseline/Transition Dyspnea Index, Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire dyspnea component, St. George's Respiratory Disease Questionnaire activity component) domains of dyspnea; functional performance (i.e., 6-minute walk, endurance shuttle walk); pulmonary function; and physiological measurements during constant work rate cycle exercise at 75% of the peak incremental work rate. Forty-one subjects completed the study: PR (n = 17) and CTRL (n = 24) groups were well matched for age, sex, body size and pulmonary function. There were no significant between-group differences in pre- to post-intervention changes in pulmonary function or physiological parameters during exercise. After PR versus CTRL, significant improvements were found in the affective and impact domains but not in the sensory-perceptual domain of dyspnea. In conclusion, clinically meaningful improvements in the affective and impact domains of dyspnea occurred in response to PR in the absence of consistent physiological training effects. © 2013 Informa Healthcare USA, Inc.
author2 Queen's University, Kingston
author_facet Queen's University, Kingston
Karin Wadell
Katherine A. Webb
Megan E. Preston
Naparat Amornputtisathaporn
Lorelei Samis
Jennifer Patelli
Jordan A. Guenette
Denis E. O'Donnell
format Article
author Karin Wadell
Katherine A. Webb
Megan E. Preston
Naparat Amornputtisathaporn
Lorelei Samis
Jennifer Patelli
Jordan A. Guenette
Denis E. O'Donnell
author_sort Karin Wadell
title Impact of pulmonary rehabilitation on the major dimensions of dyspnea in COPD
title_short Impact of pulmonary rehabilitation on the major dimensions of dyspnea in COPD
title_full Impact of pulmonary rehabilitation on the major dimensions of dyspnea in COPD
title_fullStr Impact of pulmonary rehabilitation on the major dimensions of dyspnea in COPD
title_full_unstemmed Impact of pulmonary rehabilitation on the major dimensions of dyspnea in COPD
title_sort impact of pulmonary rehabilitation on the major dimensions of dyspnea in copd
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/32236
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