Nebulized Fentanyl in Patients With Mild to Moderate Interstitial Lung Disease and Chronic Dyspnea...
Interstitial Lung DiseasePatients with interstitial lung disease (ILD) experience distressing activity-related respiratory discomfort which is challenging to manage therapeutically. Interventions such as pulmonary rehabilitation, collaborative self-management, supplemental oxygen therapy and oral opiate medications, are variably effective and therapeutic responses to each in individual patients are difficult to predict. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the acute effects of inhaled opiate therapy (fentanyl citrate) on breathing discomfort (dyspnea) in individuals with mild-to-moderate ILD, as well as examine the potential mechanisms of dyspnea relief.
Effectiveness of Volume Spirometry and Deep Breathing Exercise for Dyspnea During Third Trimester...
DyspneaPregnancy RelatedDuring pregnancy women undergoes anatomical, mechanical and physiological changes to meet the demand of growing fetus. Dyspnea is a common complaint in pregnancy related to change in respiratory centre threshold and sensitivity. Pregnant women who engaged in regular exercise have less pregnancy induced discomforts like dyspnea and leg cramps than who did not engage in exercise. During pregnancy women undergoes anatomical, mechanical and physiological changes to meet the demand of growing fetus. Purpose of this study was to evaluate the efficacy of volume Spirometry and breathing exercise on dyspnea in third trimester of pregnancy. Rationale of the study was to find the effects of volume Spirometry and breathing exercise on dyspnea with focus on method of deep breathing exercise and volume Spirometry and outcomes. Significance of this study was to improve functional capacity and quality of life in pregnancy induced dyspnea. Subjects were randomly allocated to either two groups both groups received baseline treatment while interventional group received volume Spirometry and deep breathing exercise. Estimated sample size of 48 divided into 24 in either group by randomization. Modified Borg scale and visual analog scale were used to collect the findings. Non-parametric tests were used and analyzed by using spss22.
Hydrogen/Oxygen Mixed Gas Inhalation for Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)
Covid-19Hydrogen/Oxygen Mixed Gas1 moreThis was a randomized, multi-center, open-label clinical trial. Eligible patients were recruited from seven hospitals in China. On the basis of standard-of-care, patients in treatment group inhaled H2-O2 (66% hydrogen; 33% oxygen) at 3 L/min via nasal cannula by using the Hydrogen/Oxygen Generator (model AMS-H-03, Shanghai Asclepius Meditech Co., Ltd., China) until discharge. Patients in control group received standard-of-care (consisting of oxygen therapy) alone until discharge.
Is Reduced Hypoxia Through a Robot Intervention, Associated With Sensory and Emotional Descriptions...
COPDDyspnea4 moreChronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) is associated with high morbidity and mortality. The Danish Lung Association estimates that 320,000 Danes live with COPD, of which approximately 50,000 with severe COPD. In 2017, records showed that 23,979 admissions in Denmark were related to COPD; of these patients, about 20% were readmitted 2-30 days after discharge. The main symptom is dyspnea, which is often accompanied by anxiety. Primary treatment is; oxygen, bronchiolitis, prednisolone, morfin, NIV, and anxiolytics. Researchers at Hvidovre Hospital have developed an oxygen robot that continuously monitors the patient's SaO2 (oxygen saturation) and automatically administrates the oxygen depending on it. The preliminary results show that patients with robot-administrated oxygen were within defined SaO2 range in 85.7% of the time versus 46.6% when oxygen was nurse-administrated. The research was conducted as a multicentre Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT)focusing on physiological end-points. There is a lack of knowledge about the patient perspective of treatment with the oxygen robot. The purpose of this study is: 1. To examine the association between robot-administered oxygen and patients' perception of dyspnoea, including the emotional response in the form of anxiety and depression The perspective is to be able to provide a holistic response to whether robot administered oxygen can be a better method of treating and alleviating dyspnoea.
Device-guided Breathing for Shortness of Breath in COPD
COPDDyspnea1 moreAlthough drug therapies and pulmonary rehabilitation have greatly improved COPD symptoms, as many as 50% of patients with severe COPD have inadequately controlled dyspnea. Device-guided breathing is a behavioral intervention that guides respiratory rates into a therapeutic range; prolongation of the expiratory phase improves hyperinflation, the most significant driver of dyspnea in this population. Device-guided breathing, has no known side-effects, and may represent a cost effective adjunctive treatment for dyspnea in severe COPD.
Renal Optimization Strategies Evaluation in Acute Heart Failure and Reliable Evaluation of Dyspnea...
Acute Heart FailureThe purpose of this study is to determine the benefits and safety of intravenous administration of low dose nesiritide or low dose dopamine in patients with congestive heart failure and kidney dysfunction. There is a substudy in a subset of subjects that is being used to determine whether the Provocative Dyspnea Severity Score (pDSS) is a more sensitive index of variability in clinical status than the dyspnea VAS assessed without standardization of conditions at assessments.
Combined Use of Respiratory Devices After Thoracic Surgery
DyspneaWell BeingIn a rehabilitation setting, respiratory muscle training with re-expansion techniques in patients following cardio-thoracic surgery represents a consolidated intervention. New devices called RESPILIFT® and RESPIVOl® improve deep inspiration and pulmonary volume with an effect on respiratory muscle performance and perceived dispnoea. The aim of the investigators study is to test the clinical efficacy of RESPILIFT® and RESPIVOl® in patients with a recent history of cardio-thoracic surgery.
Heliox in Experimental Upper Airway Obstruction
Airway ObstructionDyspneaCurrently it is common medical wisdom that HELIOX (mixture of Helium in Oxygen) with a fraction of Helium below 60% is not effective in reducing airway obstruction. The investigators test the hypothesis that HELIOX with a fraction of Helium below 60% is still effective in relieving airway obstruction in a double-blind, randomized and controlled clinical PoC study with experimental upper airway obstruction.
Role of Endorphins in Perception of Dyspnea With Resistive Loading in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary...
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary DiseaseEndorphins are released in response to breathing difficulty and can modify the perception of breathlessness. In this randomized placebo-controlled trial, resistive breathing loads are used to provoke breathlessness in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The hypothesis of the study is that intravenous (IV) administration of naloxone, a medication which blocks endorphin activity, will increase the perception of breathlessness experienced by patients while breathing through a resistance device, compared with IV administration of normal saline.
Neurobiological and Immunological Mechanisms of Dyspnea in ALS (BIOPNEA)
Shortness of BreathDyspnea1 moreDyspnea; subjective experience of respiratory discomfort; which produces negative emotional experience, is the most common symptom of patients afflicted with chronic respiratory failure and its treatments are limited. Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) related - dyspnea, due to diaphragmatic dysfunction, is similar to dyspnea during mechanical inspiratory load (activation of the supplementary motor area, SMA). The perception of pain and dyspnea is processed in similar brain areas (insula, dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, amygdala and medial thalamus) and in ALS; relieving dyspnea by noninvasive ventilation (NIV) is associated with decreased pain thresholds. Otherwise, it is reported systemic elevations of pro-inflammatory cytokines in chronic pain patients, correlating with intensity of pain, and during respiratory load in healthy volunteers. The objectives are to evaluate the cytokines and endorphins rates variations after initiation of NIV in ALS patients, and to correlate cytokines and endorphins rates with the intensity of the affective component and the intensity of the sensory component of dyspnea. The investigators will perform a prospective, experimental study, including 30 ALS patients. Dyspnea, ventilatory and cardiac settings, electromyographic recording of the scalene muscle and biological assays (ACTH, endorphin, Neuropeptide P, BDNF, IL1, IL6, IL8, IL10, TNF), will be measured during spontaneous breathing and during NIV at different times after initiation. The investigators expect a reduction of immunological and neurobiological markers after relieving dyspnea by NIV. This work could lead to the development of new treatments for dyspnea.