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Exercise-induced laryngeal obstruction in athletes treated with inspiratory muscle training. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Exercise-induced laryngeal obstruction (EILO) affects many athletes and is linked to symptoms like shortness of breath and chest tightness, with potential benefits from inspiratory muscle training (IMT).
  • - In a study with 28 athletes aged 16.4, a 6-week IMT program led to symptom improvement in 79% of participants, significant changes in the laryngeal function, and better ventilation during peak exercise.
  • - The findings suggest IMT could be an effective conservative treatment for certain EILO cases, highlighting the need for further controlled studies to explore these results.

Article Abstract

Background: Exercise-induced laryngeal obstruction (EILO) is common in athletes and presents with dyspnoea, chest tightness, inspiratory stridor and sometimes panic reactions. The evidence for conservative treatment is weak, but case reports suggest effects from inspiratory muscle training (IMT). We aimed to explore effects from IMT used in athletes with EILO.

Method: Twenty-eight athletes, mean age 16.4 years, diagnosed with EILO at our clinic, participated in a 6-week treatment programme, using a resistive flow-dependent IMT device (Respifit S). Four athletes competed at international level, 13 at national and 11 at regional levels. Video-recorded continuous transnasal flexible laryngoscopy was performed from rest to peak exercise (continuous laryngoscopy exercise (CLE) test) and scored before and 2-4 weeks after the training period. Ergospirometric variables were obtained from this CLE set-up. Lung function was measured according to guidelines. Symptom scores and demographic variables were obtained from a questionnaire.

Results: After the treatment period, symptoms had decreased in 22/28 (79%) participants. Mean overall CLE score had improved after treatment (p<0.001), with the scores becoming normal in five athletes but worse in two. Most of the improvement was explained by changes at the glottic laryngeal level (p=0.009). Ergospirometric variables revealed significantly higher peak minute ventilation explained by higher tidal volumes and were otherwise unchanged.

Conclusion: This explorative study underlines the heterogeneous treatment response of EILO and suggests that IMT may become an efficient conservative treatment tool in subgroups, possibly contributing to better control of the vocal folds. The signals from this study should be tested in future controlled interventional studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6350751PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjsem-2018-000436DOI Listing

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