Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of the VitaBreath Device on Chest Wall Dynamic Hyperinflation and Respiratory Muscle Activation During Recovery From Exercise in Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
The VitaBreath (Philips, Respironics) is a portable, handheld, battery powered, non-invasive
ventilation device, that has been shown to reduce activity-related shortness of breath in
patients with COPD. The VitaBreath device delivers 18 cmH2O inspiratory and 8 cmH2O
expiratory pressures, but can only be used during recovery periods.
A previous study (REC: 17/NE/0085) showed that use of the VitaBreath device during the
recovery periods interspersing successive exercise bouts enhances exercise tolerance and
reduces breathlessness compared to pursed lip breathing in patients with COPD. This was
attributed to faster recovery from exercise-induced dynamic hyperinflation, assessed by
volitional inspiratory capacity manoeuvres using a spirometer. However, inspiratory capacity
manoeuvres are effort dependent, thus limiting the number of repetitions the patient can
perform during exercise. In addition, investigation of the direct effect of the application
of the VitaBreath device on dynamic hyperinflation was not possible due to the need to employ
a spirometer for assessing inspiratory capacity. Optoelectronic plethysmography (OEP) allows
continuous non-invasive assessment of end-inspiratory and end-expiratory volumes of the
thoracoabdominal wall and its compartments, thereby facilitating assessment of dynamic
hyperinflation on a breath-by-breath basis without the necessity to breathe via a spirometer.
Unfortunately, OEP technology was not available at the time of our previous study.
The investigators will use OEP to provide accurate breath-by-breath volume measurements
during exercise and recovery to evaluate whether the VitaBreath device reduces total and
compartmental thoracoabdominal wall volumes compared to the pursed lip breathing technique.
Furthermore, the investigators will investigate the effect of use of the VitaBreath device on
respiratory muscle activation and respiratory muscle oxygenation using OEP technology in
conjunction with electromyography (EMG) and near inferred spectroscopy (NIRS), respectively
to appreciate how the application of the VitaBreath device impacts on the operation and
energy demands of the respiratory muscles as compared to control pursed lip breathing.
The investigators hypothesised that the use of the VitaBreath device during the recovery
periods interspersing successive exercise bouts will reduce the magnitude of dynamic
hyperinflation in a greater extent compared to the pursed lip breathing technique.
Study Design:
This is a randomised crossover trial. Patients will perform two identical exercise tests and
the intervention (VitaBreath) will be compared to control condition (pursed-lip breathing) in
the same patients. The order of testing will be determined by simple randomisation
(sealedenvelope.com).
The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of the VitaBreath device on
inspiratory and expiratory thoracoabdominal wall volumes during exercise in patients with
COPD. Use of the VitaBreath device will be compared to normal breathing (pursed lip breathing
technique). Patients will primarily be recruited from those who participated in our previous
study (REC reference: 17/NE/0085 - IRAS project ID: 221120) at North Tyneside General
Hospital and will undergo two exercise tests on a cycle ergometer on the same day using both
the VitaBreath device and the pursed-lip breathing technique during recovery from exercise.
Study interventions:
The study will include two visits. During the first visit patients will undergo a clinical
assessment, including history, physical examination, ECG and full lung function assessment
including spirometry, to ensure that patients are stable. During the second visit patients
will perform two intermittent exercise tests lasting 20 minutes each and consisting of 2-min
work bouts at 80% of peak work rate (WR peak) as determined in the previous study (REC
reference: 17/NE/0085 - IRAS project ID: 221120) with 2-min recovery periods in between work
bouts, using either the VitaBreath device or the pursed lip breathing technique during
recovery periods. Patients will be given written information explaining the procedure and
will provide written informed consent.
Assessment Procedures
Visit 1
Baseline assessment
During the first visit patients will undergo the following baseline assessment: a) medical
history and physical examination, b) spirometry and c) resting ECG to assess the resting
heart function.
Visit 2
Preparation of the patients
Upon arrival to the laboratory, and prior to any intervention, adhesive skin markers for
Opto-Electronic Plethysmography (OEP) recordings (to assess thoracoabdominal wall dynamic
hyperinflation), and set of adhesive optodes for portable cardio-impedance recordings (to
assess cardiac output), muscle surface electromyography (to assess muscle recruitment
patterns) and near inferred spectroscopy (to assess respiratory muscle oxygen requirement)
will be attached on the skin. All procedures will be explained in detail prior each trial.
Operational chest wall volumes
At baseline, patients will be instructed after 3-4 regular tidal breaths to make two maximal
inspiratory capacity (IC) efforts from End Expiratory Chest Wall (EECW) Volume to Total Chest
Wall Capacity (TLCCW) in order to assess chest wall volume at TLC (TLCCW) and Inspiratory
Reserve Chest wall Volume (IRVcw) at rest. During exercise and recovery, chest wall
kinematics will be measured by OEP as follows: the movement of 89 retro-reflective markers
placed front and back over the chest wall from clavicles to pubis will be recorded. Each
marker will be tracked by eight video cameras (Smart System BTS, Milan, Italy), four in front
of the subject and four behind. Subjects will be grasp handles positioned at the mid sternum
level which will lift the arms away from the rib cage so that lateral markers can be
visualised. Dedicated software reconstructs the three-dimensional coordinates of the markers
in real time by stereophotogrametry and calculates total and compartmental chest wall volume
and volume variations using Gauss's theorem. The chest wall is modelled as being composed of
two compartments-the rib cage and the abdomen. Vcw is the sum of the rib cage volume (Vrc)
and abdominal volume (Vab).
Non-Invasive assessment of respiratory muscle oxygenation
In addition to operational chest wall volumes investigators are going to assess intercostal
and abdominal local muscle oxygenation using Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (NIRS). Two NIRS
optodes, which will be connected to a NIRO 200 spectrophotometer (Hamamatsu Photonics,
Hamamatsu, Japan), will be placed on the skin over the left seventh intercostal space at the
midaxillary line and over the upper rectus abdominis respectively, and will be secured using
adhesive tape. The left intercostal space will be used to avoid potential blood flow
contributions from the liver on the right side of the body.
Respiratory muscle electromyography
Electromyography (EMG) will be used in order assess respiratory muscle activation. Skin will
be cleaned and surface electrodes (Delsys Trigno, Delsys, Boston, MA, USA) will be placed as
follows: on the surface over the right seventh intercostal space (EMGic), 2 cm lateral to the
umbilicus, over the muscle mass of rectus abdominis (EMGra), over the sternocleidomastoid
muscle (EMGster), and on the scalene muscle (EMGsca). EMG data will be recorded at 2000Hz and
will be filtered at 25-500 Hz during each trial (Spike 2, Cambridge Electronic Design,
Cambridge, UK).
Exercise protocol
Patients will undergo two intermittent exercise protocols on a cycle ergometer. The exercise
protocol will consist of repeated 2-min exercise bouts, separated by 2-min recovery periods
in between work bouts in order to allow application of the VitaBreath device. During the 1st
min of each recovery period patients will breathe either via the VitaBreath device or
adopting the pursed lip breathing technique. During the 2nd min of each recovery period
patients will breathe normally. Patients will also score the intensity of their perceived
dyspnoea using the Borg 1-10 scale. Cardiac output and stroke volume will be measured
non-invasively using a cardio-impedance method (physio-flow) throughout the exercise and
recovery periods. Respiratory muscle activation (EMG) and local respiratory muscle oxygen
tissue oxygenation (NIRS) will be continuously recorded non-invasively using optodes placed
on the skin throughout the exercise and recovery periods. In addition, arterial oxygen
saturation will be recorded throughout the exercise and recovery periods using a pulse
oximeter.
Sample size estimation
Estimation of sample size within each breathing modality is based on the results of a study
comparing use of the VitaBreath device to pursed lip breathing (PLB). Using the mean
difference in the recovery of inspiratory capacity compared to the end of exercise (130 ml)
between the VitaBreath device and PLB, the SD (110 ml), an alpha significance level of 0.05
(2-sided) and 80% power, a minimum total sample size of 11 patients is calculated to be
sufficient to detect significant differences in the magnitude of change in thoracoabdominal
wall dynamic hyperinflation between the VitaBreath device and PLB trials. 12 patients will be
recruited in order to perform the trials in a balanced ordering sequence.
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