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Physiological and perceptual responses to exercise according to locus of symptom limitation in COPD

Authors :
Jean Bourbeau
François Maltais
Hayley Lewthwaite
Benjamin M. Smith
Steven Murray
Courtney Wilkinson-Maitland
Lauren Tracey
Adamo Donovan
Dennis Jensen
Denis E. O'Donnell
Sara J. Abdallah
Tracey, Lauren
Abdallah, Sara J
Murray, Steven
Wilkinson-Maitland, Courtney A.
Donovan, Adamo
Maltais, Francois
O'Donnell, Denis E.
Bourbeau, Jean
Smith, Benjamin M
Jensen, Dennis
Lewthwaite, Hayley
Canadian Respiratory Research Network (CRRN)
Source :
Respiratory physiologyneurobiology. 273
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a heterogeneous disease, with pulmonary and extra-pulmonary factors contributing to exercise intolerance. The primary self-reported exercise-limiting symptom may reflect the primary pathophysiological factor contributing to exercise intolerance. We compared physiological and perceptual responses at the symptom-limited peak of incremental cardiopulmonary cycle exercise testing between people with COPD reporting breathlessness (B, n = 34), leg discomfort (LD, n = 16), or a combination of B and LD (BOTH, n = 42) as their main exercise-limiting symptom(s). Despite similarly impaired health status, symptomology and peak exercise capacity, the B group had greater restrictive constraints on tidal volume expansion at end-exercise and was more likely to report unpleasant qualities of exertional breathlessness than LD and BOTH groups. In conclusion, reporting breathlessness as the primary exercise-limiting symptom indicated the presence of distinct lung pathophysiology and symptom perception during exercise in people with COPD. Refereed/Peer-reviewed

Details

ISSN :
18781519
Volume :
273
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Respiratory physiologyneurobiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8cedffaaf0c3eec16a5cf834b2070ea4