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Freedive Training Gives Additional Physiological Effect Compared to Pulmonary Rehabilitation in COPD

Introduction: Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is beneficial for lung mechanics, chest kinematics, metabolism, and inspiratory and peripheral muscle function. Freediving training (FD) can be effective in sportsmen and can improve breath-holding time. Aims: We sought to determine the effectiveness of fr...

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Autores principales: Csizmadia, Zoltán, Ács, Pongrác, Szőllősi, Gergő József, Tóth, Blanka, Kerti, Mária, Kovács, Antal, Varga, János Tamás
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9517084/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36141823
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811549
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author Csizmadia, Zoltán
Ács, Pongrác
Szőllősi, Gergő József
Tóth, Blanka
Kerti, Mária
Kovács, Antal
Varga, János Tamás
author_facet Csizmadia, Zoltán
Ács, Pongrác
Szőllősi, Gergő József
Tóth, Blanka
Kerti, Mária
Kovács, Antal
Varga, János Tamás
author_sort Csizmadia, Zoltán
collection PubMed
description Introduction: Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is beneficial for lung mechanics, chest kinematics, metabolism, and inspiratory and peripheral muscle function. Freediving training (FD) can be effective in sportsmen and can improve breath-holding time. Aims: We sought to determine the effectiveness of freediving training in the pulmonary rehabilitation of COPD patients. Patients and methods: Twenty-three COPD patients (15 men and 8 women; median age 63 years; FEV1: 41% pred; BMI: 28 kg/m(2)) participated in the FD + PR group (3 weeks PR and 3 weeks FD + PR) and 46 patients with COPD (25 men and 21 women; median age 66 years; FEV1: 43% pred; BMI: 27 kg/m(2)) participated in an inpatient PR program (6 weeks). Patients performed comfort zone breath holding for 30 min/day. Patients increased their breath-holding time within their comfort zone for 30 min. We detected lung function, chest expansion (CWE), inspiratory muscle pressure (MIP), peripheral muscle function (GS), and exercise capacity (6MWD), and we included breath-holding time (BHT), quality of life score (COPD Assessment Test (CAT)), modified Medical Research Dyspnea Scale (mMRC) score, and the severity of the disease assessed by the BODE index (FEV1, BMI, 6MWD, and mMRC) and an alternative scale (FEV1, BMI, 6MWD, and CAT). Result: There were significant differences in the characteristics of the two groups. Significant improvement was detected in all functional and quality of life parameters except lung function in both groups. Significantly higher improvement was detected in CWE, GS, 6MWD, BHT, CAT, mMRC, alternative scale, and MIP. The improvement in forced vital capacity (FVC) was not significant. There were no side effects of FD training. Conclusion: The FD method can potentiate the effect of PR, improving not only BHT but also other parameters. Trial registration: ISRCTN ISRCTN13019180. Registered 19 December 2017.
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spelling pubmed-95170842022-09-29 Freedive Training Gives Additional Physiological Effect Compared to Pulmonary Rehabilitation in COPD Csizmadia, Zoltán Ács, Pongrác Szőllősi, Gergő József Tóth, Blanka Kerti, Mária Kovács, Antal Varga, János Tamás Int J Environ Res Public Health Article Introduction: Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is beneficial for lung mechanics, chest kinematics, metabolism, and inspiratory and peripheral muscle function. Freediving training (FD) can be effective in sportsmen and can improve breath-holding time. Aims: We sought to determine the effectiveness of freediving training in the pulmonary rehabilitation of COPD patients. Patients and methods: Twenty-three COPD patients (15 men and 8 women; median age 63 years; FEV1: 41% pred; BMI: 28 kg/m(2)) participated in the FD + PR group (3 weeks PR and 3 weeks FD + PR) and 46 patients with COPD (25 men and 21 women; median age 66 years; FEV1: 43% pred; BMI: 27 kg/m(2)) participated in an inpatient PR program (6 weeks). Patients performed comfort zone breath holding for 30 min/day. Patients increased their breath-holding time within their comfort zone for 30 min. We detected lung function, chest expansion (CWE), inspiratory muscle pressure (MIP), peripheral muscle function (GS), and exercise capacity (6MWD), and we included breath-holding time (BHT), quality of life score (COPD Assessment Test (CAT)), modified Medical Research Dyspnea Scale (mMRC) score, and the severity of the disease assessed by the BODE index (FEV1, BMI, 6MWD, and mMRC) and an alternative scale (FEV1, BMI, 6MWD, and CAT). Result: There were significant differences in the characteristics of the two groups. Significant improvement was detected in all functional and quality of life parameters except lung function in both groups. Significantly higher improvement was detected in CWE, GS, 6MWD, BHT, CAT, mMRC, alternative scale, and MIP. The improvement in forced vital capacity (FVC) was not significant. There were no side effects of FD training. Conclusion: The FD method can potentiate the effect of PR, improving not only BHT but also other parameters. Trial registration: ISRCTN ISRCTN13019180. Registered 19 December 2017. MDPI 2022-09-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9517084/ /pubmed/36141823 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811549 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Csizmadia, Zoltán
Ács, Pongrác
Szőllősi, Gergő József
Tóth, Blanka
Kerti, Mária
Kovács, Antal
Varga, János Tamás
Freedive Training Gives Additional Physiological Effect Compared to Pulmonary Rehabilitation in COPD
title Freedive Training Gives Additional Physiological Effect Compared to Pulmonary Rehabilitation in COPD
title_full Freedive Training Gives Additional Physiological Effect Compared to Pulmonary Rehabilitation in COPD
title_fullStr Freedive Training Gives Additional Physiological Effect Compared to Pulmonary Rehabilitation in COPD
title_full_unstemmed Freedive Training Gives Additional Physiological Effect Compared to Pulmonary Rehabilitation in COPD
title_short Freedive Training Gives Additional Physiological Effect Compared to Pulmonary Rehabilitation in COPD
title_sort freedive training gives additional physiological effect compared to pulmonary rehabilitation in copd
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9517084/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36141823
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811549
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