Constellation, le dépôt institutionnel de l'Université du Québec à Chicoutimi

Influences of Spinal Anesthesia on Exercise Tolerance in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Gagnon Philippe, Bussières Jean S., Ribeiro Fernanda, Gagnon Serge L., Saey Didier, Gagné Nathalie, Provencher Steeve et Maltais François. (2012). Influences of Spinal Anesthesia on Exercise Tolerance in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease. American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 186, (7), p. 606-615.

Le texte intégral n'est pas disponible pour ce document.

URL officielle: https://doi.org/10.1164/rccm.201203-0404OC

Résumé

Rationale: Lower limb muscle dysfunction contributes to exercise intolerance in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). We hypothesized that signaling from lower limb muscle group III/IV sensory afferents to the central motor command could be involved in premature cycling exercise termination in COPD.

Objectives: To evaluate the effects of spinal anesthesia, which presumably inhibited central feedback from the lower limb muscle group III/IV sensory afferents on exercise tolerance and cardiorespiratory response during constant work-rate cycling exercise in patients with COPD.

Methods: In a crossover and double-blind randomized design, eight patients with COPD (FEV1, 67 ± 8% predicted) completed a constant work-rate cycling exercise after sham (NaCl, interspinous L3–L4) or active (fentanyl 25 μg, intrathecal L3–L4) spinal anesthesia.

Measurements and Main Results: When compared with placebo, endurance time was significantly prolonged after spinal anesthesia with fentanyl (639 ± 87 s vs. 423 ± 38 s [mean ± SEM]; P = 0.01). Ventilation and respiratory rate were reduced at isotime points under the fentanyl condition, whereas ventilatory efficiency and dead space ventilation were improved. Patients exhibited less dynamic hyperinflation at isotime points with spinal anesthesia. Consequently, the rise in dyspnea was significantly flatter during the fentanyl condition than with placebo.

Conclusions: Spinal anesthesia enhanced cycling exercise tolerance in patients with COPD, mostly by reducing ventilatory response and dyspnea during exercise; these effects were possibly mediated through the inhibition of group III/IV lower limb sensory muscle afferents.

Type de document:Article publié dans une revue avec comité d'évaluation
Volume:186
Numéro:7
Pages:p. 606-615
Version évaluée par les pairs:Oui
Date:2012
Sujets:Sciences de la santé
Sciences de la santé > Sciences de l'activité physique et réadaptation
Sciences de la santé > Sciences médicales > Pneumologie
Département, module, service et unité de recherche:Départements et modules > Département des sciences de la santé
Mots-clés:chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, exercise tolerance, peripheral muscle dysfunction, ventilatory response, group III/IV afferents
Déposé le:05 déc. 2024 15:02
Dernière modification:05 déc. 2024 15:02
Afficher les statistiques de telechargements

Éditer le document (administrateurs uniquement)

Creative Commons LicenseSauf indication contraire, les documents archivés dans Constellation sont rendus disponibles selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons "Paternité, pas d'utilisation commerciale, pas de modification" 2.5 Canada.

Bibliothèque Paul-Émile-Boulet, UQAC
555, boulevard de l'Université
Chicoutimi (Québec)  CANADA G7H 2B1
418 545-5011, poste 5630