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Exertional dyspnea is a major cause of exercise limitation and anxiety, and contributes importantly to reduced quality of life for patients with COPD. The aim of this study is to determine the efficacy and mechanism of NIV with a dual-limb circuit plus oxygen therapy in relieving exertional dyspnea in patients with severe COPD, so as to provide a guidance for clinical use for NIV.
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Exertional dyspnea was the most characteristic respiratory symptoms in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), it is a major cause of exercise limitation and anxiety, and contributes importantly to reduced quality of life for patients with COPD. COPD patients often unconsciously adopt a sedentary lifestyle, probably due to distressing exertional dyspnea. The sedentarism results in physical deconditioning and alterations of the peripheral muscles, which leads to a vicious circle and contribute to the debilitation of the patients. Thereby, intervention should be taken to intervene this vicious cycle. It has been reported that noninvasive ventilation (NIV) could help unload the inspiratory muscle, improve dynamic pulmonary hyperinflation, improve neuro-mechanical coupling, oxygenation, and thus relieved dyspnea during exercise in COPD patients. However, in these reports, NIV was used as add-on therapy during exercise or at resting condition before exertional dyspnea occurred. So far, there's few studies on the efficacy of NIV used at the time of exertional dyspnea occurred as the rescue therapy to relieve dyspnea after exercise in patients with stable severe COPD while the patients are already undergoing optimal treatment with bronchodilator and anti-inflammatory medication, which might relieve their physiological and perceptional burden to limit their activities. The result of the investigators previous study has suggested that compared with oxygen therapy, NIV plus oxygen therapy resulted in decrease in dyspnea intensity at isotime, however, there's no statistically significant shortening in total dyspnea recovery time and NIV was not helpful in all the COPD patients. In another study, it was indicated that ventilated by a single-limb tubing with a plateau exhalation valve (PEV) caused CO2 rebreathing to COPD patients during exercise. CO2 rebreathing may have a negative impact on efficacy. Previous studies have proved that exercise tolerance was improved ventilated by noninvasive ventilation with a dual-limb circuit. In theory, NIV with a dual-limb circuit consists of one inhalation limb that introduces air into the patient's airways and one exhalation limb that leads exhaled gas outside of the airways, there is no risk of rebreathing. However, it is unclear whether NIV with a dual-limb circuit could be used at the time of exertional dyspnea occurred as rescue therapy to relieve dyspnea after exercise in patients with stable severe COPD and what are the mechanisms. The purpose of this study was therefore to determine whether assisted with NIV with dual-limb circuit in patients with stable severe COPD after exercise with exertional dyspnea (1)dyspnea was relieved after exercise in patients with stable severe COPD; (2)the repiratory mechanism.
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12 participants in 2 patient groups
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