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Diagnostic differences in respiratory breathing patterns and work of breathing indices in children with Duchenne muscular dystrophy
Author(s) -
Lauren Ryan,
Tariq Rahman,
Abigail Strang,
Robert A. Heinle,
Thomas H. Shaffer
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0226980
Subject(s) - medicine , duchenne muscular dystrophy , work of breathing , respiratory system , respiratory rate , ventilation (architecture) , heart rate , plethysmograph , respiratory minute volume , cardiology , breathing , pulmonary function testing , physical therapy , anesthesia , blood pressure , mechanical engineering , engineering
Rationale Pulmonary function testing (PFT) provides diagnostic information regarding respiratory physiology. However, many forms of PFT are time-intensive and require patient cooperation. Respiratory inductance plethysmography (RIP) provides thoracoabdominal asynchrony (TAA) and work of breathing (WOB) data. pneu RIP TM is a noninvasive, wireless analyzer that provides real-time assessment of RIP via an iPad. In this study, we show that pneu RIP TM can be used in a hospital clinic setting to differentiate WOB indices and breathing patterns in children with DMD as compared to age-matched healthy subjects. Methods RIP using the pneu RIP TM was conducted on 9 healthy volunteers and 7 DMD participants (ages 5–18) recruited from the neuromuscular clinic, under normal resting conditions over 3–5 min during routine outpatient visits. The tests were completed in less than 10 minutes and did not add excessive time to the clinic visit. Variables recorded included labored-breathing index (LBI), phase angle (Φ) between abdomen and rib cage, respiratory rate (RR), percentage of rib cage input (RC%), and heart rate (HR). The data were displayed in histogram plots to identify distribution patterns within the normal ranges. The percentages of data within the ranges (0≤ Φ ≤30 deg.; median RC %±10%; median RR±5%; 1≤LBI≤1.1) were compared. Unpaired t-tests determined significance of the data between groups. Results 100% patient compliance demonstrates the feasibility of such testing in clinical settings. DMD patients showed a significant elevation in Φ, LBI, and HR averages ( P <0.006, P <0.002, P <0.046, respectively). Healthy subjects and DMD patients had similar BPM and RC% averages. All DMD data distributions were statistically different from healthy subjects based on analysis of histograms. The DMD patients showed significantly less data within the normal ranges, with only 49.7% Φ, 48.0% RC%, 69.2% RR, and 50.7% LBI. Conclusion In this study, noninvasive pneu RIP TM testing provided instantaneous PFT diagnostic results. As compared to healthy subjects, patients with DMD showed abnormal results with increased markers of TAA, WOB indices, and different breathing patterns. These results are similar to previous studies evaluating RIP in preterm infants. Further studies are needed to compare these results to other pulmonary testing methods. The pneu RIP TM testing approach provides immediate diagnostic information in outpatient settings.

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