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Respiratory muscle training in neuromuscular disease: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Authors :
Kathryn Watson
Thorlene Egerton
Nicole Sheers
Sarah Retica
Rebekah McGaw
Talia Clohessy
Penny Webster
David J. Berlowitz
Source :
European Respiratory Review. 31:220065
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
European Respiratory Society (ERS), 2022.

Abstract

BackgroundNeuromuscular disease causes a progressive decline in ventilatory function which respiratory muscle training may address. Previous systematic reviews have focussed on single diseases, whereas this study systematically reviewed the collective evidence for respiratory muscle training in children and adults with any neuromuscular disease.MethodsSeven databases were searched for randomised controlled trials. Three reviewers independently reviewed eligibility, extracted characteristics, results, determined risk of bias and combined results using narrative synthesis and meta-analysis.Results37 studies (40 publications from 1986–2021, n=951 participants) were included. Respiratory muscle training improved forced vital capacity (standardised mean difference (SMD) 0.40 (95% confidence interval 0.12–0.69)), maximal inspiratory (SMD 0.53 (0.21–0.85)) and maximal expiratory pressure (SMD 0.70 (0.35–1.04)) compared to control (usual care, sham or alternative treatment). No impact on cough, dyspnoea, voice, physical capacity or quality of life was detected. There was high degree of variability between studies.DiscussionStudy heterogeneity (children and adults, different diseases, interventions, dosage and comparators) suggests that the results should be interpreted with caution. Including all neuromuscular diseases increased the evidence pool and tested the intervention overall.ConclusionsRespiratory muscle training improves lung volumes and respiratory muscle strength in neuromuscular disease, but confidence is tempered by limitations in the underlying research.

Details

ISSN :
16000617 and 09059180
Volume :
31
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Respiratory Review
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ecd2b651c33fbd86adf5ff9336381268
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1183/16000617.0065-2022