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UnknownNCT03127059

Breathing Exercises in Asthma Targeting Dysfunctional Breathing

BEAT DB-study; Breathing Exercises in Asthma Targeting Dysfunctional Breathing-a Randomised Controlled Trial

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
190 (estimated)
Sponsor
Naestved Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Dyspnoe can disable patients with asthma. Dysfunctional breathing (DB), resulting in dyspnoe, can mimic or exaggerate asthma. Around every forth patient with asthma have DB. Breathing exercises (BrEX) can improve asthma-related quality of live (QOL) in less severe asthma. No study has investigated the effect of BrEX on QOL neither on level of physical activity in severe asthma. A randomised controlled multicentre trial will include 190 adults with poor asthma control (Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ6)-score≥0.8) from seven outpatient departments and one specialized private clinic. Patients will be allocated to either usual care (no intervention) or breathing exercises (BrEX)-treatment consisting of 12-week intervention including three physiotherapist-sessions focusing on breathing pattern modification (Papworth Method; Buteyko technique) in rest and activity and 10 minutes home-exercise twice daily. Primary outcome is change in Mini Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (MiniAQLQ) at six-months follow-up.

Detailed description

In Denmark around 300,000 suffer from asthma. Dyspnoe can disable patients with asthma. Dysfunctional breathing (DB), resulting in dyspnoe, can mimic or exaggerate asthma. Around 20-29% of asthmatic patients have DB. Breathing exercises (BrEX) can improve asthma-related quality of life (QOL) and control of asthma symptoms in less severe asthma. No study has investigated the effect of BrEX on QOL neither on level of physical activity in severe asthma. A randomised controlled multicentre trial will include 190 adults with poor asthma control (Asthma Control Questionnaire (ACQ6)-score≥0.8) from seven outpatient departments and one specialized private clinic. After optimizing of inhalation technique, patients will be allocated to either usual care (no intervention) or BrEX-treatment consisting of 12-week intervention including three physiotherapist-sessions focusing on breathing pattern modification (Papworth Method; Buteyko technique) in rest and activity and 10 minutes home-exercise twice daily. Primary outcome is change in Mini Asthma Quality of Life Questionnaire (MiniAQLQ) at six-months follow-up. Secondary outcomes are changes in ACQ6, Nijmegen Hyperventilation Questionnaire (NQ), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HAD), accelerometry (physical activity level, number of steps), 6 minutes walk distance, and forced expiratory volume in first second (FEV1), besides response of Global perceived effect rate (GPE) in asthma-related QOL and asthma control.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERBreathing ExercisesKey points in the intervention are * Reduction (or normalising) of the respiration rate; use of rhythmic, nasal inspiration, diaphragmatic breathing; reduction of depth of breath, longer expiration; breath-holding at functional residual capacity. * Relaxation, especially the neck, jaw, tongue, and shoulders. Emphasizing the impact of gravity to the body. * Inclusion of the breathing modification into walking and other physical activities. * Daily home exercise of BrEX.
OTHERUsual careParticipants will receive only short information given initially at recruitment. No instruction or booklet will be distributed in the Usual care-Group.

Timeline

Start date
2017-04-27
Primary completion
2020-04-14
Completion
2024-08-31
First posted
2017-04-25
Last updated
2024-03-22

Locations

8 sites across 1 country: Denmark

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03127059. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.