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Most of the effort of controlling breathlessness happens at home. Therefore, it is important to explore how patients and carers respond to breathlessness, what their self-care entails and what they experience as helpful. Data were collected from a purposive sample of 18 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients through participant observation during outpatient consultations and in-depth interviews at a large hospital and in the community in London. Data were analysed with the Grounded Theory approach. As information regarding the management of breathlessness was lacking and access to treatment was difficult, patients reverted to alternative strategies. Some patients developed considerable expertise and managed their symptoms competently within the limits of current care. Patients who coped successfully were involved in pulmonary rehabilitation and had adopted this as a way of life. Benefits and challenges to participation in these programmes were identified. Those patients who self-manage maintain an acceptable quality of life through self-acquired expertise relating to symptoms, medication and help-seeking. Well-being needs to be understood not as the end point, but as a precarious balance needing skilful maintenance and hard work. The findings have implications for notions such as adherence, patient involvement and responsibility in the management of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Chronic respiratory conditions are responsible for increasing numbers of patients in need of long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT). However, many patients do not use their oxygen as prescribed. Unless we can assist these patients in living with oxygen therapy, optimal clinical outcomes will not be achieved. We conducted a meta-synthesis of qualitative research studies. We included any qualitative study that focused on the psychosocial nature or experience of patients prescribed LTOT. Four research studies met the conditions of our search. We performed a rigorous methodological protocol for meta-synthesis as described by the Joanna Briggs Institute. A total of 12 findings formulated four themes. These themes included the following: adapting oxygen to life’s circumstances, living in a restricted world, self-management is fostered by oxygen, and submission and dependency. From the four thematic categories established, meta-synthesis resulted in two major results: persons prescribed oxygen rationalize its use while negotiating lifestyle interference and physical restrictions and the drive to care for one’s self is conflicted. This meta-synthesis showed that each oxygen user faces tremendous physical, psychological, and emotional challenges. They strive to adapt and maintain mastery but eventually oxygen dependency results. These challenges affect the patient’s ability to adhere to their treatment guidelines. These barriers and challenges are seldom addressed and are under-treated. Clinicians involved in LTOT need to be aware and work with the patients to facilitate their use of oxygen. Inclusion of the patients’ perspective can guide practice and assist with the development of new interventions and management strategies.
C-reactive protein (CRP), a biomarker of inflammation, has predicted mortality in end-stage respiratory failure and in the critically ill patients. Our aim was to investigate if CRP can predict morbidity and mortality in patients requiring prolonged mechanical ventilation. A prospective study conducted in a ventilator weaning unit of a skilled nursing facility over 13 months included 98 patients older than 18 years of age requiring mechanical ventilation via tracheostomy. Serum CRP and albumin levels were tested on admission. Age, gender, body mass index (BMI), and diagnoses causing respiratory failure were recorded. The outcomes measured were as follows: hospitalization, weaned from mechanical ventilation, and death. Our population had a median age of 77 years and the median BMI, albumin, and mean CRP were 26 kg/m2, 2.25 g/dL, and 5.75 mg/dL, respectively. The most common diseases leading to respiratory failure were pulmonary, neurologic, and cardiac. The patients with the empiric cutoff CRP of <2 mg/dL (
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) imposes a costly burden on healthcare. Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is the best practice to better manage COPD to improve patient outcomes and reduce acute hospital care utilization. To evaluate the impact of a once-weekly, eight-week multidisciplinary PR program as an integral part of the COPD chronic disease management (CDM) Program at Kyabram District Health Services. The study compared two cohorts of COPD patients: CDM-PR Cohort (4–8 weeks) and Opt-out Cohort (0–3 weeks) between February 2006 and March 2007. The CDM-PR Program involved multidisciplinary patient education and group exercise training. Nonparametric statistical tests were used to compare acute hospital care utilization 12 months before and after the introduction of CDM-PR. The number of patients involved in the CDM-PR Cohort was 29
The aim of this study was to evaluate a novel patient-held manual designed to reduce the evidence–practice gap in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The intervention manual contained summaries of research evidence. It was developed using current best practice for patient information materials and designed to cause discussion of evidence between patient and doctor. A controlled before-and-after study was employed in two similar but geographically separate regions of metropolitan Adelaide, South Australia. Participants had moderate to severe COPD, with 249 included at baseline and 201 completing the study. Evidence-based COPD management was measured using an indicator with three components: rates of influenza vaccination, bone density testing, and pulmonary rehabilitation. A survey of behavioral steps leading to practice change was conducted with the trial. Analysis, by median split of socioeconomic disadvantage, showed significant difference between study arms for only one component of the indicator of evidence-based practice, enrolment in pulmonary rehabilitation and only for the most socioeconomically disadvantaged stratum. For both socioeconomic strata, more intervention participants than control participants reported remembering being given the information material, reading part or all, and finding it very or quite helpful. Other significant differences were restricted to the stratum of greatest socioeconomic disadvantage: reading all of the material, learning from it, referring back, and talking to a doctor about a topic from the material. Above 90% of all participants who received the manual reported reading from it, 42% reported discussing topics with a doctor, but only 10% reported treatment change attributable to the manual. We have found that people with COPD will read an evidence manual developed using current best practice. However, the study demonstrated improvement for only one of the three components of an indicator of evidence-based disease management for only the most socioeconomically disadvantaged stratum of participants. Future interventions should be designed to better translate reading uptake into evidence-based disease management.

The term “cor pulmonale” is still popular but there is presently no consensual definition and it seems more appropriate to define the condition by the presence of pulmonary hypertension (PH) resulting from diseases affecting the structure and/or the function of the lungs: PH results in right ventricular enlargement and may lead with time to right heart failure (RHF). Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is the first cause of cor pulmonale, far before idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and obesity–hypoventilation syndrome. In chronic respiratory disease (CRD) PH is “pre-capillary,” due to an increase of pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR). The first cause of increased PVR is chronic long-standing alveolar hypoxia which induces pulmonary vascular remodeling. The main characteristic of PH in CRD and particularly in COPD is its mild to moderate degree, resting pulmonary artery mean pressure (PAP) in a stable state of the disease usually ranging between 20 and 35 mmHg. However, PH may worsen during exercise, sleep, and exacerbations of the disease. These acute increases in afterload can favor the development of RHF. A minority (<5%) of COPD patients exhibit severe or “disproportionate” PH (PAP >40 mmHg), the mechanism of which is not well understood. At present long-term oxygen therapy (LTOT) is the logical treatment of PH since alveolar hypoxia is considered to be the major determinant of the elevation of PAP and PVR. LTOT stabilizes or at least attenuates and sometimes reverses the progression of PH, but PAP seldom returns to normal. Vasodilators (prostacyclin, endothelin receptor antagonists, sildenafil, nitric oxide) could be considered in patients with severe PH but controlled studies in this field are presently lacking.
