Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 153, No. 1, Jan 1996, 260-265.
Nocturnal saturation improves by target-flow inspiratory muscle training in patients with COPD
YF Heijdra, PN Dekhuijzen, CL van Herwaarden and HT Folgering
Department of Pulmonary Diseases, University of Nymegen, Medical Centre Dekkerswald, Groesbeek, The Netherlands.
Nocturnal desaturations during rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, caused by
nonobstructive hypoventilation, occur frequently in patients with chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). This is partly caused by decreased
activity of the intercostal and accessory muscles due to a lower motor
command. The diaphragm has to compensate for the diminished activity of
these muscles during REM sleep. However, in patients with COPD strength and
endurance of the diaphragm may be affected by its unfavorable position on
the length-tension curve because of hyperinflation. The aim of this study
was to establish the causal relationship between respiratory muscle
function and nocturnal saturation in patients with COPD. We hypothesized
that target-flow inspiratory muscle training (TF-IMT) would improve
nocturnal saturation. In 20 patients with stable COPD (FEV1 35.5 +/- 14.1%
of predicted) and a mean nocturnal saturation below 92% we measured maximal
inspiratory pressure (PImax), transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi), maximal
sustainable inspiratory pressure (SIPmax), endurance time, and nocturnal
saturation in Weeks 0, 4, and 10. During these 10 wk 10 patients underwent
TF-IMT at 60% of PImax and 10 control patients received sham TF-IMT at 10%
of PImax. PImax, Pdi, SIPmax, and the endurance time as well as the
nocturnal saturation improved significantly in the 60% training group (by
3.0 +/- 1.5 kPa, 3.4 +/- 1.9 kPa, 1.5 +/- 1.4 kPa, 189 +/- 149 s, and 1.9
+/- 2.2%, respectively), whereas no changes occurred in the sham training
group. Also, significant correlations were observed between the changes in
Pdi, SIPmax, and endurance time on the one hand and the change in nocturnal
saturation on the other. We conclude that TF-IMT improves the nocturnal
saturation in patients with severe COPD by increasing respiratory muscle
strength and endurance.
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Copyright © 1996 American Thoracic Society
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