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Mucociliary Clearance Techniques in Moderate Bronchiolitis

G

Guadarrama Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Bronchiolitis

Treatments

Other: Group prolonged slow expiration (ELPr)
Other: Control group (CG)
Other: Assisted autogenous drainage group (DAA)

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Acute viral bronchiolitis (BE) is an inflammatory disease of the lower respiratory tract, with a viral etiology, where the respiratory syncytial virus is the most prevalent agent. Respiratory physiotherapy (FTR) aims to remove airway obstruction, which decreases airway resistance, improves gas exchange, and reduces respiratory load. It is widely used in the treatment of children with chronic respiratory disease, but has long been debated as a treatment for bronchiolitis.

The objective of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of two mucociliary clearance techniques in non-hospitalized children <12 months with a first episode of moderate BE.

This is a clinical trial that aims to recruit patients from 2 to 12 months who attend the Physiobronchial physiotherapy centers in Madrid, A Coruña, and Barcelona with a first-time medical diagnosis of BQ of 48 hours of maximum evolution. Participants will be randomly assigned into 3 groups: Group A: Assisted Autogenous Drainage (DAA), Group B: Prolonged Slow Expiration (ELPr) and Control Group. The main variables are the Acute Bronchiolitis Severity Scale (ESBA), oxygen saturation (SaO2), the modified Wood-Downes scale (WD-S), the Hospital scale Sant Joan de Déu (HSJD) and the ReSVinet Scale (RSV-S), and will be measured by a blinded evaluator at the beginning of the session (T0), 20 minutes after administering short-acting β2 adrenergic agonist (SABA) (T20 ), immediately after nebulization (T40) and at the end of the physiotherapist's intervention (T60). It will be reassessed 48 hours after the session (T48h) and the protocol will be repeated completely if it has not dropped at least two points according to the scales.

Full description

The main objective of the present work is to evaluate the effectiveness of two mucociliary clearance techniques in non-hospitalized children <12 months with a first episode of moderate BE.

Once each patient legal guardians has signed the informed consent document and it has been verified that the inclusion criteria are met, participants will be assigned the same identification number (ID) that is related to its Clinical History (CH) by simple coding; custody of the file with the relationship of each ID with its CH will be the responsibility of the principal investigator. The method of blinding in the allocation will be performed by choosing opaque sealed envelopes by a person external to the study. The contents of the envelopes will be the random assignment cards to each of the three groups, this simple random numerical sequence will be generated by computer using the R program see 3.5.1. (R Foundation for Statistical Computing,Institute for Statistics and Mathematics, Welthandelsplatz 1, 1020 Vienna, Austria) based on stratified sampling for homogeneity, in three groups:Group A: assisted autogenous drainage group (DAA), group B: group prolonged slow expiration (ELPr), group C: control group (CG).

None of the children that make up both intervention group A and B, and the control group, will be prohibited from the usual pharmacological treatment prescribed by their doctor. It will collect in the investigator's notebook the medications that each patient has prescribed by their doctor. Physiotherapists cannot prescribe drugs, but can administer them at the beginning of the protocol after the prescription by the doctor.

Within the protocol, the short-acting β2 adrenergic agonist (SABA) will be administered, prior to nebulization with 4 ml Muconeb® 3% hypertonic serum, for 8 minutes in a Philips® vibrating mesh nebulizer. Next, following protocols will be applied:

  • Intervention based on DAA Group A: the technique consists of positioning the patient in a supine position with the head slightly elevated on the supporting plane and then placing both hands around the rib cage and applying bimanual expiratory compression on both hemithoraxes. The physiotherapist must ensure that the child takes 2 to 3 controlled breaths, close to the residual level, with the objective that the expiratory flow displaces the secretions, located distally, towards the central airways.
  • Intervention based on ELPr Group B: this technique applied to the baby by means of a slow thoracic-abdominal pressure that begins at the end of a spontaneous expiration and continues until the residual volume. The physiotherapist through the provoked cough or stimulation of the trachea achieves the expectoration of the sputum.
  • Group C: nebulization with 4 ml Muconeb® 3% hypertonic serum, for 8 minutes in a Philips® vibrating mesh nebulizer.

The timing of intervention protocol will be followed: a) The SABA prescribed by the doctor will be administered to all patients; b) 20 minutes later the patient will then receive an 8-minute nebulization of Muconeb® 3% hypertonic solution; c) The treatment techniques protocol will consist of a standard 20 minute session based on nasal washes and the protocols descrive above for each intervention group.

Both groups will receive 3 evaluations by an investigator who will be blinded on the treatment and the objectives. The evaluations will be carried out at the beginning of the session (T0), 20 minutes after the SABA administration (T20), after the nebulization of Muconeb® 3% hypertonic solution (T30), after intervention treatment protocol (T60) and, finially, after 48 hours from ending treatment session (T48).

The main variables will classify the participants according to the initial clinical severity score proposed by the Acute Bronchiolitis Severity Scale (ESBA), the Wood-Downes Scale modified by Ferres (WDF-S), the Scale of the Sant Joan de Déu Hospital (HSJD) and the ReSVinet Scale (RSV-S). HR is a variable that is collected on the HSJD and WDS scales. SaO2 is included in the HSJD and ESBA scale, both will be measured through a pulse oximeter (Radical Touchscreen from Massimo®, Masimo Corporation, Irvine, CA).

Enrollment

165 patients

Sex

All

Ages

2 to 12 months old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Be between 2 and 12 months of age (according to the latest Clinical Practice Guide on BQ of the National Health System available in Spain, it is considered comorbidity to have less than 2 months old)twenty.
  • Have a medical diagnosis of a first episode of acute BE.
  • Acute BE with a moderate degree of involvement with a score on the Acute Bronchiolitis Severity Scale (ESBA) ≥ 5 and ≤ 9.
  • Acute BE with a degree of moderate severity with a modified Wood-Downes Scale (WD-S) score ≥ 4 and ≤ 5.
  • Acute BE in a moderate degree of severity with a score according to the Hospital Sant Joan de Déu (HSJD) scale ≥ 6 and ≤ 10.
  • Acute BE in a moderate degree of severity with a score on the ReSVinet Scale ( RSV-S) ≥ 7 and ≤ 13.
  • Have not previously received respiratory physiotherapy since diagnosis.
  • Oxygen saturation (SaO2) ≥ 94%,and j) have the informed consent of the child's legal guardians.

Exclusion criteria

  • Acute BE with a score of ≤ 4 or ≥ 10 according to ESBA.
  • Acute BE with a score ≤ 3 or ≥ 6 on the WD-S.
  • Acute BE with score ≤ 5 or ≥ 11 in HSJD.
  • Acute BE with score ≤ 6 or ≥ 14 in RSV-S, f) SaO2 ≤ 93%.
  • Associated congenital heart disease, h ) previous hospitalizations for recurrent wheezing or episode of bronchiolitis requiring admission for more than 48 hours.
  • Medical diagnosis of recurrent wheezing.
  • Failure to follow up at 48 hours.
  • No parental consent.
  • Premature infants <32- 35 weeks.
  • Bronchopulmonary dysplasia.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

165 participants in 3 patient groups

Assisted autogenous drainage group (DAA)
Experimental group
Description:
The technique consists of positioning the patient in a supine position with the head slightly elevated on the supporting plane and then placing both hands around the rib cage and applying bimanual expiratory compression on both hemithoraxes.
Treatment:
Other: Assisted autogenous drainage group (DAA)
Group prolonged slow expiration (ELPr)
Experimental group
Description:
This technique is applied to the baby by means of a slow thoracic-abdominal pressure that begins at the end of a spontaneous expiration and continues until the residual volume.
Treatment:
Other: Group prolonged slow expiration (ELPr)
Control group (CG)
Active Comparator group
Description:
Nebulization with 4 ml Muconeb® 3% hypertonic serum, for 8 minutes in a Philips® vibrating mesh nebulizer.
Treatment:
Other: Control group (CG)

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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