Enhancing exercise tolerance in interstitial lung disease with high‐flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy: A randomized crossover trial

Author:

Yanagita Yorihide1ORCID,Arizono Shinichi2ORCID,Yokomura Koshi3,Ito Kumiko4,Machiguchi Hikaru5ORCID,Tawara Yuichi2,Katagiri Norimasa6,Iida Yuki7,Nakatani Eiji8,Tanaka Takako1,Kozu Ryo1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physical Therapy Science Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences Nagasaki Japan

2. Department of Physical Therapy, School of Rehabilitation Sciences Seirei Christopher University Hamamatsu Japan

3. Division of Respiratory Medicine, Respiratory Disease Center Seirei Mikatahara General Hospital Hamamatsu Japan

4. Department of Rehabilitation Seirei Mikatahara General Hospital Hamamatsu Japan

5. Department of Rehabilitation Kanagawa Cardiovascular and Respiratory Center Yokohama Japan

6. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Seirei Mikatahara General Hospital Hamamatsu Japan

7. Department of Physical Therapy, School of Health Science Toyohashi Sozo University Toyohashi Japan

8. Graduate School of Public Health Shizuoka Graduate University of Public Health Shizuoka Japan

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectiveInterstitial lung disease (ILD) is characterized by dyspnoea on exertion and exercise‐induced hypoxaemia. High‐flow nasal cannula (HFNC) therapy reduces the respiratory workload through higher gas flow and oxygen supplementation, which may affect exercise tolerance. This study aimed to examine the effects of oxygen and gas flow rates through HFNC therapy on exercise tolerance in ILD patients.MethodsWe conducted three‐treatment crossover study. All ILD patients performed the exercises on room air (ROOM AIR setting: flow, 0 L/min; fraction of inspired oxygen [FiO2], 0.21), HFNC (FLOW setting: flow 40 L/min, FiO2 0.21), and HFNC with oxygen supplementation (FLOW + OXYGEN setting: flow 40 L/min, FiO2 0.6). The primary endpoint was the endurance time, measured using constant‐load cycle ergometry exercise testing at a peak work rate of 80%.ResultsTwenty‐five participants (10 men, 71.2 ± 6.7 years) were enrolled. The increase in exercise duration between the ROOM AIR and FLOW was 46.3 s (95% CI, −6.1 to 98.7; p = 0.083), and the FLOW and FLOW + OXYGEN was 91.5 s (39.1–143.9; p < 0.001). The percutaneous oxygen saturation (SpO2) at rest was significantly higher with the FLOW + OXYGEN setting than with the ROOM AIR and FLOW settings, and the difference persisted during exercise. At equivalent time points during exercise, the SpO2 with the FLOW setting was significantly higher than that with the ROOM AIR setting.ConclusionOxygen supplementation in HFNC therapy improved exercise tolerance and SpO2. We found that gas flow alone did not improve exercise tolerance, but improved SpO2 during exercise.image

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

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