Tag Archives: death

COPDers Most Accurate Measurement of Disease Severity is the 6-Minute Walk According to Netherlands Study

COPDers (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease) are familiar with the 6-minute walking test but the following study presented recently at the American Thoracic Society ATS 2011 Denver is the best explanation I’ve seen of what the test result really means in the progression of the disease.

COPD is the 3rd leading cause of death in the US, 5th in the world.   For many of us it means don’t waste time.   Most of us already know we might be short timers based on other folk’s reactions – like my wonderful dentist doesn’t mention fixing my lower teeth – he just kindly replaced the upper teeth insert my dog, Dean chewed up.

Mr. Dean is a notorious thief of night guards (three) and now he is a pick pocket of false teeth inserts.  He can’t be trusted around teeth in an pocket or loose anywhere he can jump.  I thought he wanted petting – ha!  Seven tiny pieces were found scattered in his cushioned pad and carefully carried to Dr. Robinson.

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Harrison Medical Center, Silverdale Better Breather’s (American Lung Association) upcoming meeting is a super place to ask the questions – more about the meeting in Monday’s blog post.

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American Thoracic Society

‘Walking distance’ test an accurate indicator of disease severity in patients with COPD

ATS 2011, DENVER – The six-minute walking distance test (6MWD), a test that measures a patient’s ability to tolerate exercise and physical activity, is an effective tool for understanding disease severity in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), according to a three-year global study of patients with COPD sponsored by drug manufacturer GlaxoSmithKline.

“We found that baseline 6MWD was predictive of hospital admission with an acute COPD exacerbation, was relatively stable in milder COPD, and has a steady rate of decline in patients with severe disease,” said study author Martijn Spruit, PhD, scientific advisor and research leader at the Centre of Expertise for Chronic Organ Failure (CIRO+) in Horn, the Netherlands. “This confirms prior observations that the results of the 6MWD are related to the risk of death in patients with COPD, and that the test is a useful tool in understanding disease severity in patients with COPD.”

Researchers studied 2,110 patients with moderate to severe COPD who underwent a supervised 6MWD at study enrollment to provide a baseline value and annually for 3 years. Death and exacerbation-related hospitalization were recorded.

During 3 years of observation, 200 patients died and 650 were hospitalized for exacerbations. Mortality rates and exacerbation-related hospitalization were higher in COPD patients as baseline 6MWD decreased. Researchers found that a 6MWD threshold of 357 meters was optimal to predict increased risk of hospitalization; while a 6MWD threshold of 334 meters was optimal to predict an increased risk of death. The mean rate of deterioration of the 6MWD was 5.7 meters per year and was primarily limited by the ability of the patient to breathe easily.

“Exercise tolerance is an important clinical aspect of COPD which can be easily and reliably measured with the 6MWD test,” Dr. Spruit said. “These data confirm the power of the 6MWD to identify subsets of the COPD population at higher risk of exacerbation-related hospitalization or death.

“The ability to group COPD patients according to their functional status disease severity should enable healthcare providers to better tailor therapy for their patients and optimize use of medical resources,” he added. “Patient grouping is also useful for those designing interventional studies in COPD; for example, if the aim of an intervention were to reduce the rate of exacerbation related admission, then a study can be designed by including primarily patients at higher risk of that outcome.”

Dr. Spruit also noted that the 6MWD test offers benefits over a more traditional test of COPD disease severity, the FEV1 (forced expiratory volume in the first second) which measures a patient’s ability to forcefully exhale air in one second. “The FEV1 has limitations as a marker of disease severity in COPD because it fails to capture systemic manifestations of the disease,” he said. “This study was designed to determine if the 6MWD could be an additional measure of disease severity, and the results confirmed that it can.”

(I exhale to just this side of fainting to get the best results – results hinge on the patient’s effort)

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“Reduced 6MWD Is Associated With Increased Mortality And Exacerbation-Related Hospitalization In COPD: The Eclipse Study” (Session A93, Sunday, May 15, 2:00-4:30 p.m., Room 505-506-507 (Street Level), Colorado Convention Center; Abstract 17736)

* Please note that numbers in this release may differ slightly from those in the abstract. Many of these investigations are ongoing; the release represents the most up-to-date data available at press time.

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http://patients.thoracic.org/

http://www.thoracic.org/

Thanks for reading… Sharon O’Hara

The Strange Ways of Sleep Apnea

Sleep Apnea is a strange medical condition usually requiring a CPAP OR BIPAP machine to draw in room air through filters into a hose attached to the facemask we have harnessed to our head. The facemask confines the air and pushes it through the open airway into happy air gulping lungs. The machine lets us sleep.

The latest and greatest news first is that a small clinical study showed the CPAP machine might help the heart function better in sleep apnea patients. http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/ASE/tb/14658

What did the study indicate about the BIPAP patients? That is a good question to ask Harrison Medical Center’s lead Sleep Specialist, Daniel Moore, at the next AWAKE sleep support group meeting on the 17th…

Another study shows something amazing to me…

In an eight-year study funded by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute, the moderate to severe sleep apnea patients appear more likely to die from any cause, regardless of age, gender, race, weight, smoking history, or other medical conditions…

“… It is still unknown whether treating sleep apnea reduces risk of death and cardiovascular disease. …

(SHHS) enrolled more than 6,000 men and women ages 40 years and older at multiple centers around the U.S. to determine cardiovascular and other consequences of sleep-disordered breathing…. researchers found similar relationships between sleep apnea and deaths related to coronary artery disease.

They also found an association between the lack of oxygen that results when patients with sleep apnea momentarily stop breathing and all-cause mortality. But they found no relationship between mortality and waking due to apnea….

…the researchers cautioned that the study had several limitations. …might have introduced some bias into the study…. they noted that this study was the largest of its kind to date…. carefully collecting data on sleep, breathing abnormalities, and a wide range of other health factors….

…”Given the high and likely increasing prevalence of sleep-disordered breathing in the general population, additional research in the form of randomized clinical trials should be undertaken to assess if treatment can reduce premature mortality associated with this common and chronic disorder,” the authors wrote.”
The authors are Dr. Naresh M. Punjabi and co-investigator, David M Rapoport.

Punjabi N, et al “Sleep-disordered breathing and mortality: A prospective cohort study” PLoS Med 2009; DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1000132.

http://www.medpagetoday.com/Pulmonary/SleepDisorders/15574?impressionId=1251401547027

More later… Sharon O’Hara