Exertional breathlessness related to medical conditions in middle-aged people: the population-based SCAPIS study of more than 25,000 men and women
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Published:2024-03-16
Issue:1
Volume:25
Page:
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ISSN:1465-993X
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Container-title:Respiratory Research
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Respir Res
Author:
Ekström Magnus,Sundh Josefin,Andersson Anders,Angerås Oskar,Blomberg Anders,Börjesson Mats,Caidahl Kenneth,Emilsson Össur Ingi,Engvall Jan,Frykholm Erik,Grote Ludger,Hedman Kristofer,Jernberg Tomas,Lindberg Eva,Malinovschi Andrei,Nyberg André,Rullman Eric,Sandberg Jacob,Sköld Magnus,Stenfors Nikolai,Sundström Johan,Tanash Hanan,Zaigham Suneela,Carlhäll Carl-Johan
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Breathlessness is common in the population and can be related to a range of medical conditions. We aimed to evaluate the burden of breathlessness related to different medical conditions in a middle-aged population.
Methods
Cross-sectional analysis of the population-based Swedish CArdioPulmonary bioImage Study of adults aged 50–64 years. Breathlessness (modified Medical Research Council [mMRC] ≥ 2) was evaluated in relation to self-reported symptoms, stress, depression; physician-diagnosed conditions; measured body mass index (BMI), spirometry, venous haemoglobin concentration, coronary artery calcification and stenosis [computer tomography (CT) angiography], and pulmonary emphysema (high-resolution CT). For each condition, the prevalence and breathlessness population attributable fraction (PAF) were calculated, overall and by sex, smoking history, and presence/absence of self-reported cardiorespiratory disease.
Results
We included 25,948 people aged 57.5 ± [SD] 4.4; 51% women; 37% former and 12% current smokers; 43% overweight (BMI 25.0–29.9), 21% obese (BMI ≥ 30); 25% with respiratory disease, 14% depression, 9% cardiac disease, and 3% anemia. Breathlessness was present in 3.7%. Medical conditions most strongly related to the breathlessness prevalence were (PAF 95%CI): overweight and obesity (59.6–66.0%), stress (31.6–76.8%), respiratory disease (20.1–37.1%), depression (17.1–26.6%), cardiac disease (6.3–12.7%), anemia (0.8–3.3%), and peripheral arterial disease (0.3–0.8%). Stress was the main factor in women and current smokers.
Conclusion
Breathlessness mainly relates to overweight/obesity and stress and to a lesser extent to comorbidities like respiratory, depressive, and cardiac disorders among middle-aged people in a high-income setting—supporting the importance of lifestyle interventions to reduce the burden of breathlessness in the population.
Funder
Vetenskapsrådet Lund University
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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