Elsevier

Respiratory Medicine

Volume 94, Issue 3, March 2000, Pages 256-263
Respiratory Medicine

Regular Article
Physiological and symptom determinants of exercise performance in patients with chronic airway obstruction

https://doi.org/10.1053/rmed.1999.0734Get rights and content
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Abstract

To evaluate the physiological and symptom determinants of exercise performance (EP) as measured by a 6-min walking test (6MWD), Wattmax, and peak oxygen consumption (O2ml/min/kg), 105 patients with chronic airway obstruction (CAO) [50 chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD): 44 men, aged 63±7 years, forced expiratory volume in 1 sec (FEV1) forced vital capacity (FVC)−1% 54±13; and 55 asthmatic: 23 men, aged 55±10 years, FEV1FVC−1% 65±10] underwent evaluation of 6MWD, symptom limited cyclo-ergometer exercise test, spirometry, respiratory muscle function, arterial blood gases and sensation of dyspnoea [using the Borg scale, Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) and Baseline Dyspnoea Index (BDI)].

A hierarchical method of analysis identified the residual volume (RV), total lung capacity (TLC)−1ratio, BDI and the patient's age as the strongest and most consistent correlates of EP (r2=0·14–0·21). The correlation between EP and its various determinants was not influenced by diagnosis. The relationship between breathlessness and EP was different between men and women: at any given level of exercise, women were more breathless than men. In multivariate analyses that contained both RV TLC−1and BDI, the RV TLC−1ratio was the strongest correlate of EP, although the BDI remained a significant covariate. Overall, age was the major determinant of EP but inclusion of the RV TLC−1ratio and the BDI into the model explained a further 9–15% of the variance in EP. These three covariates together explained 26–34% of the variance between patients.

We conclude that in stable CAO patients, the prediction of exercise capacity by anthropometric, demographic, clinical and physiological variables is likely to be low. Age, pulmonary hyperinflation and dyspnoea are the strongest and most consistent correlates of impaired exercise performance. Airways obstruction, measured during expiration using FEV1, does not appear to be a predictor of physiological impairment. These results underline the importance of performing exercise evaluation in CAO patients.

Keywords

chronic airway obstruction
exercise performance
physiological determinants
symptom determinants.

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Correspondence should be addressed to: Nicolino Ambrosino MD, Fondazione Salvatore Maugeri IRCCS, Lung Function Unit, Centro Medico di Riabilitazione, 25064 Gussago (BS), Italy. Fax: 39 030 2521718, E-mail: [email protected]