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Abdominal Binding: a Novel Intervention to Relieve Dyspnea and Improve Exercise Tolerance in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease?
Conventional approaches to relieve dyspnea (respiratory discomfort) in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have focused on improving respiratory motor drive (e.g., hyperoxia) and/or dynamic respiratory mechanics (e.g., bronchodilators). Although these approaches yield meaningful symptom improvements there remains many COPD patients incapacitated by dyspnea. Accumulating evidence suggests that abdominal binding (AB) is a potentially novel method of improving respiratory muscle function and, by extension, dyspnea and exercise tolerance in COPD. Thus, the purpose of this randomized, cross-over study is to test the hypothesis that AB improves exertional dyspnea and exercise tolerance in symptomatic patients with COPD by improving dynamic respiratory muscle function. To this end, the investigators will examine the effects of AB on detailed assessments of baseline pulmonary function (spirometry, plethysmography), dyspnea (sensory intensity \& affective responses), neural respiratory drive (diaphragm EMG), contractile respiratory muscle function (esophageal, gastric \& transdiaphragmatic pressures), ventilation, breathing pattern and cardiometabolic function during symptom-limited constant load cycle exercise (75% Wmax) in 20 patients with GOLD stage II/III COPD.
Age
40 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Montreal Chest Institute; McGill University Health Center & McGill University
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Start Date
January 1, 2014
Primary Completion Date
May 1, 2015
Completion Date
May 1, 2015
Last Updated
August 26, 2015
20
ACTUAL participants
Abdominal Binder
DEVICE
Lead Sponsor
McGill University
NCT07477600
NCT05878769
NCT06717659
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