Background: Pursed-lip breathing (PLB) is a strategy often spontaneously employed by patients with COPD during distress situations. Whether and to what extent PLB affects operational lung volume is not known. Also, conflicting reports deal with PLB capability of decreasing breathlessness.
Participants And Measurements: Twenty-two patients with mild-to-severe COPD were studied. Volumes of chest wall (CW) compartments (rib cage [RC] and abdomen) were assessed using an optoelectronic plethysmograph. Dyspnea was assessed by a modified Borg scale.
Results: Compared to spontaneous breathing, patients with PLB exhibited a significant reduction (mean +/- SD) in end-expiratory volume of the CW (VCW) [VCWee; - 0.33 +/- 0.24 L, p < 0.000004], and a significant increase in end-inspiratory VCW (VCWei; + 0.32 +/- 0.43 L, p < 0.003). The decrease in VCWee, mostly due to the decrease in end-expiratory volume of the abdomen (VAbee) [- 0.25 +/- 0.21 L, p < 0.00002], related to baseline FEV(1) (p < 0.02) and to the increase in expiratory time (TE) [r(2) = 0.49, p < 0.0003] and total time of the respiratory cycle (TTOT) [r(2) = 0.35, p < 0.004], but not to baseline functional residual capacity (FRC). Increase in tidal volume (VT) of the chest wall (+ 0.65 +/- 0.48 L, p < 0.000004) was shared between VT of the abdomen (0.31 +/- 0.23 L, p < 0.000004) and VT of the rib cage (+ 0.33 +/- 0.29 L, p < 0.00003). Borg score decreased with PLB (p < 0.04). In a stepwise multiple regression analysis, decrease in VCWee accounted for 27% of the variability in Borg score at 99% confidence level (p < 0.008).
Conclusions: Changes in VCWee related to baseline airway obstruction but not to hyperinflation (FRC). By lengthening of TE and TTOT, PLB decreases VCWee and reduces breathlessness.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1378/chest.125.2.459 | DOI Listing |
J Orthop Trauma
December 2024
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Regions Hospital, St. Paul, MN.
As the operative management of acute, chest wall, skeletal injury escalates throughout the world, it has become commonplace for patients with posttraumatic conditions to present with clinical reconstructive challenges as well. In addition, it is becoming clear that rib nonunions are not rare, likely more than 5% of rib fractures. No subspecialty is better equipped to address such painful conditions than orthopaedic surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Orthop Trauma
December 2024
Section of Acute Care Surgery, Department of General Surgery, Stanford University, Stanford, CA.
Thoracic injuries are common, occurring in up to 60% of polytrauma patients and represent 25% of trauma deaths. Thoracic trauma frequently involves injury to the pleural space resulting in hemothorax and pneumothorax-effective management of the pleural space is essential. Reviewed in this article is management of the pleural space in chest wall trauma (including pneumothorax and hemothorax), and chest tube placement, indications for video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery, management, and complications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Orthop Trauma
December 2024
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Missouri - Columbia, Missouri Orthopaedic Institute, Columbia, MO.
Effective management of bony and cartilaginous thoracic injury is a vital part of the care of the polytraumatized patient. Commonly because of high-energy accidents including motor vehicle collisions and falls, these patients routinely require multidisciplinary care and surgical intervention. As our understanding of unstable chest wall injuries and pulmonary sequelae of the injury grows, it is imperative that injury patterns and surgical approaches become familiar to the orthopaedic trauma-trained surgeon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Orthop Trauma
December 2024
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Regions Hospital, St. Paul, MN; and.
Chest wall trauma is rapidly evolving and now represents a multidisciplinary field with incredible growth in research and surgical intervention; however, even with more than 800 publications on chest wall trauma to date, surgical indications are not black and white. Injury patterns need to be better defined and outcome measurements need to evolve for accurate longer term functional assessment of patients if this field of surgery is to move beyond historical indications for operative intervention. This essay will communicate what is known about operative indications in a way that stratifies the need for surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Orthop Trauma
December 2024
Department of Orthopaedics, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH.
The ribs, sternum, and costal margin provide a rigid, but flexible chest wall that functions to provide protection to the vital cardiothoracic organs, while also allowing for varying levels of respiration based on physiologic need. The latter function is accomplished through various muscular attachments and rib articulations with both the axial spine posteriorly and the sternum anteriorly. The accessory muscles of inspiration rely on the downward slope and outward curve of each rib, which when contracted move the ribs upward and outward, in turn forcing the sternum anterior and increasing the thoracic volume.
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