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Clinical Trial Summary

The main objective of this study is to measure the effect (at 3 months) of dyspnea control rehabilitation with nasal ventilation versus standard rehabilitation, in dyspneic patients with hyperventilation syndrome.


Clinical Trial Description

Hyperventilation syndrome (SHV) is a complex disorder of adaptation of ventilation to exercise. This is a frequent reason for consultation because it is associated with major symptoms, which can be a source of sometimes heavy exploration and wandering. The breathless patient reduces his activity and enters the vicious circle of deconditioning. The principal clinical symptom in this pathology is the dyspnea with hypocapnia. The diagnosis is based on quality of life questionnaires and provocation tests, such as stress testing. When hypocapnia becomes chronic, a disturbance of breathing control sets in.

In SHV therapy, control of ventilation to exercise is recommended in the first line. It aims to slow the respiratory rate or tidal volume with, for example, techniques of voluntary hypoventilation and abdominal ventilation. But the evidence of literature is lacking to recommend a particular technique. Given the implication of the dysfunction of the nose, of non-unicist and often multifactorial origin in the respiratory pathologies, one of the possibilities of intervention is to reeducate the patient to the nasal ventilation.

Our rehabilitation of nasal ventilation is based on the clinical observation of hyperventilation dyspnea. During breathlessness breathing is essentially oral. It is a natural mechanism of adaptation that responds to the metabolic demand, which is far too present in the hyperventilation syndrome. From our therapeutic experience, the hypothesis is that the work on nasal ventilation can provide the necessary elements for the correction of SHV. The importance of the nasal breath in managing emotions and effort in sport is already considered.

This study will evaluate pathophysiological and clinical parameters effets of rehabilitation of nasal ventilation compared to those of the technique of voluntary hypoventilation (ThV) which is the conventional management of patients with SHV. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03159429
Study type Interventional
Source University Hospital, Montpellier
Contact
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
Start date October 5, 2017
Completion date January 15, 2020

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