COPD Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Prospective Randomized Trial of Incentive Spirometry in Non-critically Ill Hospitalized Patients With Shortness of Breath
To evaluate the use of Incentive Spirometry in Non-critically Ill Hospitalized Patients With Shortness of Breath.
In recent years the focus in medicine has shifted towards efficient utilization of resources
and improving patient outcomes. Incentive spirometry (IS) is a tool that mimics the natural
process of yawning or sighing by allowing the user to take deep breaths in a controlled
setting. This is a lung inflating maneuver that has been suggested to decrease the rate of
pulmonary complications. The focus of utilization of IS and current studies has been
predominantly on the post-operative surgical patient population. The mechanism of pulmonary
complications in surgical patients is mixed in etiology possibly related to anesthesia,
analgesics, pain and immobility leading to shallow breathing and subsequent atelectasis with
concurrent hypoxia and risk of infection. The use of lung expanding maneuvers such as that
provided by IS are thought to counteract shallow breathing thereby improving pulmonary
outcomes. However, contrary to physiological theory, multiple studies and meta-analysis have
failed to demonstrate its efficacy. The results of these studies are in direct conflict with
what is expected scientifically.
The authors of this paper set out to find the reason for discordant data in existing
literature, and found that there have been multiple methodological limitations associated
with existing studies; hence, interpretation and recommendations based on current data
should be done with caution. The common denominator in repeated criticisms of existing
studies is lack of reporting on patient compliance with IS after it is prescribed. This is a
major confounder, in clinical experience IS is often observed sitting dormant at patients'
bedside. These observations are in synchrony with criticisms reported in literature and
raise serious questions about validity of existing data that should be acknowledged. Despite
lack of convincing evidence, IS is routinely prescribed by physicians in hospital medicine.
IS is a low cost tool, nevertheless, the increasing frequency of its use is accumulating to
a larger proportion of health care costs. This calls for further evaluation with a study of
higher methodological quality to address the limitations of prior studies.
The scope of this study is different than that of existing studies in that it will evaluate
the utility of IS in general medical patients. The sub-set of patients that are the focus of
this study are those admitted with the chief complaint of "shortness of breath." The disease
process in the former group leading to shortness of breath includes fluid over-load such as
that in congestive heart failure, or an underlying lung process such as pneumonia, COPD,
and/or pulmonary embolism. There is a parallel between mechanism of hypoxia in these
patients and surgical patients in that these patients too often have pain and take high
doses of analgesics, have shallow monotonous breathing and are immobile for long periods of
time. From a physiological standpoint sustained maximal inhalation maneuvers may reverse and
prevent progression of atelectasis by maintaining airway patency in all patients with
shallow breathing of varying etiology not just the surgical sub-set.
In a tertiary center community teaching hospital the effectiveness of IS in general medical
wards will be evaluated using a single center randomized clinical trial. The goal is to
offer a study that overcomes the limitations of prior studies. Lack of strong evidence based
data has led to inconsistencies in practice of physicians leading to higher health care
costs. The authors hope to design a study of high methodological quality to assess the
effectiveness of IS in medical patients; thereby closing the knowledge gap in evidence based
practices that may aid physicians in their decision to utilize IS.
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