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RecruitingNCT07484490

Effects of the Active Cycle of Breathing Technique With and Without Balloon Blowing Therapy in Tuberculosis

Effects of the Active Cycle of Breathing Technique With and Without Balloon Blowing Therapy on Sputum Secretion, Dyspnea, and Functional Capacity in Children With Tuberculosis

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
34 (estimated)
Sponsor
Riphah International University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
8 Years – 14 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The study design will be a randomized controlled trial. The data will be collected from Gulab Devi Teaching Hospital, Lahore. 34 kids aged 8 to 14 years will be randomly assigned either to an experimental group or a control group. The intervention group includes the active Cycle of Breathing technique with balloon-blowing therapy for 3 days. The control group includes the active cycle of breathing technique. Sputum secretion will be measured by 'sputum measurement cups." Dyspnea will be measured by the "Modified Borg dyspne Scale," and functional capacity will be measured by the "6-Minute Walk Test." Data will be analyzed through SPSS version 25.0.

Detailed description

Pulmonary Tuberculosis (TB) is still a major health concern, especially in underdeveloped nations. Poor lung function, sputum retention, and dyspnea are common in children with tuberculosis (TB), which can limit their physical activity and quality of life. Physiotherapy treatments are essential for controlling these problems. An effective airway clearance technique that improves ventilation and mucus mobilization is the Active Cycle of Breathing Techniques (ACBT). Similarly, balloon therapy has been shown to strengthen respiratory muscles and alleviate dyspnea. Both interventions are low-cost, non-invasive, and feasible for implementation across diverse clinical and community settings. Although these therapies are successful when used separately, their combined effect on the therapy of pediatric tuberculosis has not been fully investigated. The aim of this study is to investigate the Effect of the Active cycle of breathing technique with and without balloon blowing therapy on sputum secretion, dyspnea and functional capacity in children with tuberculosis The study design will be a randomized controlled trial. The data will be collected from Gulab Devi Teaching Hospital, Lahore. 34 kids aged 8 to 14 years will be randomly assigned either to an experimental group (n=17) or a control group (n=17). The intervention group includes the active Cycle of Breathing technique with balloon-blowing therapy for 3 days. The control group includes the active cycle of breathing technique. Sputum secretion will be measured by 'sputum measurement cups." Dyspnea will be measured by the "Modified Borg Scale," and functional capacity will be measured by the "6-Minute Walk Test." Data will be analyzed through SPSS version 25.0.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERActive cycle of breathing with Balloon therapyACBT will be administered twice daily, with each session lasting 10 minute for 3 days (25). It consists of following phases 1. Breathing Control (1-2 min): • participants will uses diaphragmatic breathing. • During this stage, the shoulders and upper chest of participants are relaxed alongside the lower chest to maintain a regular breathing rhythm and tidal volume. • With both hands on the abdomen, the patient inhales through the nose and exhales to assist relax the airways through the oral opening. • This method should be used six times. 2. Thoracic Expansion (3-5 repetitions): • During this phase, the patient inhales through their nose, holds it for two to three seconds, and then exhales. • (FET) is involves relaxed breathing followed by one or two "huffs" BALLOON BLOWING THERAPY: child should be upright seating. Participants will instruct to inhale deeply through the nose and exhale slowly into the balloon with straw in 30 minutes
OTHERActive Cycle of breathingACBT will be administered twice daily, with each session lasting 10 minute for 3 days (25). It consists of following phases 1. Breathing Control (1-2 min): • In this stage the participants will uses diaphragmatic breathing. • During this stage, the shoulders and upper chest of participants are relaxed alongside the lower chest to maintain a regular breathing rhythm and tidal volume. • With both hands on the abdomen, the patient inhales through the nose and exhales to assist relax the airways through the oral opening. • This method should be used six times. 2. Thoracic Expansion (3-5 repetitions): • During this phase, the patient inhales through their nose, holds it for two to three seconds, and then exhales. • This phase facilitates airflow and relaxes secretions. 7. The forced expiratory technique (FET) • his involves relaxed breathing followed by one or two "huffs" from mid to low lung volumes to facilitate secretion clearance

Timeline

Start date
2026-01-29
Primary completion
2026-07-30
Completion
2026-08-30
First posted
2026-03-20
Last updated
2026-03-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Pakistan

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07484490. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.