EFFECTS OF INCENTIVE SPIROMETRY ON DYSPNEA AND CHEST CLEARANCE IN ASTHMATIC PATIENTS DURING SEASONAL SMOG
Asthma is a serious and life threatening chronic respiratory disease that affects the quality of life of more than 23 million Americans- with exposure to air pollution. Air pollution can make asthma symptoms worse and trigger asthma attacks. Particle pollution can cause breathing problems. It's created when tiny bits of dust, dirt, smoke, soot, and other stuff hang in the air. The smaller the particles, the deeper they can get into the lungs and cause breath problems. Seasonal smog aggravates asthma, irritates the lungs, and makes it difficult to breathe. Long-term inflammation from breathing in too much ground-level ozone can permanently scar lung tissue. Smog with high levels of ozone is also particularly damaging for people with asthma. During seasonal smog asthma patients are more affected than normal people. Various consecutive treatments are used to treat the asthma patients for the improvement of quality of life. But at this check the effects of incentive spirometry on dyspnea and chest clearance in asthmatic patients. This study will be randomized controlled trial. This study will be conducted in Ittefaq Hospital Lahore. Subjects meeting the predetermined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Sample size will be 44 including both male and female. QUESTIONNAIRE used as subjective measurements and ASHMA CONTROL TEST as objective measurement. Dyspnea-12 will be used to check the dyspnea severity in asthma patients and asthma control test will be used to check asthma severity during seasonal smog. Cough and sputum assessment questionnaire will be used to check effectiveness of chest clearance. Subjects of one group will be treated with active cycle of breathing and incentive spirometry and the other group will be treated with only spirometry. Each group will receive 12 treatment sessions with one treatment session per week and it will take less than 1 hour. Pre- treatment reading of dynpnea-12, cough and sputum assessment questionnaire and asthma control test will be recorded. And post-treatment readings will also be recorded. Outcome variables will be dyspnea-12, incentive spirometry, cough and sputum assessment questionnaire and asthma control test. Most commonly used incentive spirometry to clear the dyspnea and chest clearance in asthma patients. Data will be analyzed on SPSS-25.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
41
* Sit up and hold the device. * Then Place the mouthpiece spirometer in mouth and make a good seal over the mouthpiece with lips. * Breathe out (exhale) normally. * Breathe in (inhale) slowly. A piece in the incentive spirometer will rise as you breathe in. And try to get this piece to rise as high as you can. * Usually, there is a marker placed by your doctor that tells you how big of a breath you should take. A smaller piece in the spirometer looks like a ball or disk. * Your goal should be to make sure this ball stays in the middle of the chamber while you breathe in. * If you breathe in too fast, the ball will shoot to the top. * If you breathe in too slowly, the ball will stay at the bottom. Hold your breath for 3 to 5 seconds. Then slowly exhale.
Breathe in and out gently through your nose if you can. If you cannot, breathe through your mouth instead. If you breathe out through your mouth, it's best to use breathing control with 'pursed lips breathing'. keep your shoulders relaxed. Try closing your eyes to help you to focus on your breathing and to relax. Breathing control should continue until the person feels ready to progress to the other stages in the cycle. Try to keep your chest and shoulders relaxed. At the end of the breath in, hold the air in your lungs for 2-3 seconds before breathing out. Breathe out gently and relaxed. Repeat 3 - 5 times. Sit up straight with chin tilted slightly up and mouth open. Take a slow deep breath to fill lungs about three quarters full. Hold breath for two or three seconds. Exhale forcefully, but slowly, in a continuous exhalation to move mucus from the smaller to the larger airways
Iettefaq hospital
Lahore, Punjab Province, Pakistan
Asthma Control test
In asthma control test we use spirometer to check out the respiratory functions.
Time frame: 12 weeks
Incentive Spirometry
An incentive spirometer is a handheld medical device that measures the volume of our breath. It helps our lungs recover after surgery or lung illness, keeping them active and free of fluid.
Time frame: 12 weeks
This platform is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional.