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NIV Is not Adequate for High Intensity Endurance Exercise in COPD

Noninvasive ventilation (NIV) during exercise has been suggested to sustain higher training intensity but the type of NIV interface, patient-ventilator asynchronies (PVA) or technological limitation of the ventilator may interfere with exercise. We assessed whether these parameters affect endurance...

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Autores principales: Bonnevie, Tristan, Gravier, Francis-Edouard, Fresnel, Emeline, Kerfourn, Adrien, Medrinal, Clément, Prieur, Guillaume, Combret, Yann, Muir, Jean-François, Cuvelier, Antoine, Debeaumont, David, Reychler, Gregory, Patout, Maxime, Viacroze, Catherine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7230463/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32276370
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm9041054
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author Bonnevie, Tristan
Gravier, Francis-Edouard
Fresnel, Emeline
Kerfourn, Adrien
Medrinal, Clément
Prieur, Guillaume
Combret, Yann
Muir, Jean-François
Cuvelier, Antoine
Debeaumont, David
Reychler, Gregory
Patout, Maxime
Viacroze, Catherine
author_facet Bonnevie, Tristan
Gravier, Francis-Edouard
Fresnel, Emeline
Kerfourn, Adrien
Medrinal, Clément
Prieur, Guillaume
Combret, Yann
Muir, Jean-François
Cuvelier, Antoine
Debeaumont, David
Reychler, Gregory
Patout, Maxime
Viacroze, Catherine
author_sort Bonnevie, Tristan
collection PubMed
description Noninvasive ventilation (NIV) during exercise has been suggested to sustain higher training intensity but the type of NIV interface, patient-ventilator asynchronies (PVA) or technological limitation of the ventilator may interfere with exercise. We assessed whether these parameters affect endurance exercise capacity in severe COPD patients. In total, 21 patients with severe COPD not eligible to home NIV performed three constant workload tests. The first test was carried out on spontaneous breathing (SB) and the following ones with NIV and a nasal or oronasal mask in a randomized order. PVA and indicators of ventilator performance were assessed through a comprehensive analysis of the flow pressure tracing raw data from the ventilator. The time limit was significantly reduced with both masks (406 s (197–666), 240 s (131–385) and 189 s (115–545), p < 0.01 for tests in SB, with oronasal and nasal mask, respectively). There were few PVA with an oronasal mask (median: 3.4% (1.7–5.2)) but the ventilator reached its maximal generating capacity (median flowmax: 208.0 L/s (189.5–224.8) while inspiratory pressure dropped throughout exercise (from 10.1 (9.4–11.4) to 8.8 cmH2O (8.6–10.8), p < 0.01). PVA were more frequent with nasal mask (median: 12.8% (3.2–31.6), p < 0.01). Particularly, the proportion of patients with ineffective efforts > 10% was significantly higher with nasal interface (0% versus 33.3%, p < 0.01). NIV did not effectively improve endurance capacity in COPD patients not acclimated to home NIV. This was due to a technological limitation of the ventilator for the oronasal mask and the consequence either of an insufficient pressure support or a technological limitation for the nasal mask.
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spelling pubmed-72304632020-05-22 NIV Is not Adequate for High Intensity Endurance Exercise in COPD Bonnevie, Tristan Gravier, Francis-Edouard Fresnel, Emeline Kerfourn, Adrien Medrinal, Clément Prieur, Guillaume Combret, Yann Muir, Jean-François Cuvelier, Antoine Debeaumont, David Reychler, Gregory Patout, Maxime Viacroze, Catherine J Clin Med Article Noninvasive ventilation (NIV) during exercise has been suggested to sustain higher training intensity but the type of NIV interface, patient-ventilator asynchronies (PVA) or technological limitation of the ventilator may interfere with exercise. We assessed whether these parameters affect endurance exercise capacity in severe COPD patients. In total, 21 patients with severe COPD not eligible to home NIV performed three constant workload tests. The first test was carried out on spontaneous breathing (SB) and the following ones with NIV and a nasal or oronasal mask in a randomized order. PVA and indicators of ventilator performance were assessed through a comprehensive analysis of the flow pressure tracing raw data from the ventilator. The time limit was significantly reduced with both masks (406 s (197–666), 240 s (131–385) and 189 s (115–545), p < 0.01 for tests in SB, with oronasal and nasal mask, respectively). There were few PVA with an oronasal mask (median: 3.4% (1.7–5.2)) but the ventilator reached its maximal generating capacity (median flowmax: 208.0 L/s (189.5–224.8) while inspiratory pressure dropped throughout exercise (from 10.1 (9.4–11.4) to 8.8 cmH2O (8.6–10.8), p < 0.01). PVA were more frequent with nasal mask (median: 12.8% (3.2–31.6), p < 0.01). Particularly, the proportion of patients with ineffective efforts > 10% was significantly higher with nasal interface (0% versus 33.3%, p < 0.01). NIV did not effectively improve endurance capacity in COPD patients not acclimated to home NIV. This was due to a technological limitation of the ventilator for the oronasal mask and the consequence either of an insufficient pressure support or a technological limitation for the nasal mask. MDPI 2020-04-08 /pmc/articles/PMC7230463/ /pubmed/32276370 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm9041054 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bonnevie, Tristan
Gravier, Francis-Edouard
Fresnel, Emeline
Kerfourn, Adrien
Medrinal, Clément
Prieur, Guillaume
Combret, Yann
Muir, Jean-François
Cuvelier, Antoine
Debeaumont, David
Reychler, Gregory
Patout, Maxime
Viacroze, Catherine
NIV Is not Adequate for High Intensity Endurance Exercise in COPD
title NIV Is not Adequate for High Intensity Endurance Exercise in COPD
title_full NIV Is not Adequate for High Intensity Endurance Exercise in COPD
title_fullStr NIV Is not Adequate for High Intensity Endurance Exercise in COPD
title_full_unstemmed NIV Is not Adequate for High Intensity Endurance Exercise in COPD
title_short NIV Is not Adequate for High Intensity Endurance Exercise in COPD
title_sort niv is not adequate for high intensity endurance exercise in copd
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7230463/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32276370
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm9041054
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