CQUniversity
Browse
- No file added yet -

Fixed-intensity exercise tests to measure exertional dyspnoea in chronic heart and lung populations: a systematic review

Download (646.79 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-05-24, 01:43 authored by Tanya PalmerTanya Palmer, Steven ObstSteven Obst, CR Aitken, J Walsh, S Sabapathy, L Adams, NR Morris
Introduction Exertional dyspnoea is the primary diagnostic symptom for chronic cardiopulmonary disease populations. Whilst a number of exercise tests are used, there remains no gold standard clinical measure of exertional dyspnoea. The aim of this review was to comprehensively describe and evaluate all types of fixed-intensity exercise tests used to assess exertional dyspnoea in chronic cardiopulmonary populations and, where possible, report the reliability and responsiveness of the tests. Methods A systematic search of five electronic databases identified papers that examined 1) fixed-intensity exercise tests and measured exertional dyspnoea, 2) chronic cardiopulmonary populations, 3) exertional dyspnoea reported at isotime or upon completion of fixed-duration exercise tests, and 4) published in English. Results Searches identified 8785 papers. 123 papers were included, covering exercise tests using a variety of fixed-intensity protocols. Three modes were identified, as follows: 1) cycling (n=87), 2) walking (n=31) and 3) other (step test (n=8) and arm exercise (n=2)). Most studies (98%) were performed on chronic respiratory disease patients. Nearly all studies (88%) used an incremental exercise test. 34% of studies used a fixed duration for the exercise test, with the remaining 66% using an exhaustion protocol recording exertional dyspnoea at isotime. Exertional dyspnoea was measured using the Borg scale (89%). 7% of studies reported reliability. Most studies (72%) examined the change in exertional dyspnoea in response to different interventions. Conclusion Considerable methodological variety of fixed-intensity exercise tests exists to assess exertional dyspnoea and most test protocols require incremental exercise tests. There does not appear to be a simple, universal test for measuring exertional dyspnoea in the clinical setting.

History

Volume

32

Issue

169

Start Page

1

End Page

18

Number of Pages

18

eISSN

1600-0617

ISSN

0905-9180

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

Publisher License

CC BY-NC

Additional Rights

CC-BY-NC

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2023-05-31

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Electronic-Print

Journal

European Respiratory Review