CNE Article: Pain After Lung Transplant: High-Frequency Chest Wall Oscillation vs Chest Physiotherapy

Author:

Esguerra-Gonzalez Angeli1,Ilagan-Honorio Monina1,Fraschilla Stephanie2,Kehoe Priscilla3,Lee Ai Jin1,Marcarian Taline1,Mayol-Ngo Kristina1,Miller Pamela S.4,Onga Jay2,Rodman Betty1,Ross David5,Sommer Susan1,Takayanagi Sumiko3,Toyama Joy6,Villamor Filma1,Weigt S. Samuel5,Gawlinski Anna7

Affiliation:

1. Angeli Esguerra-Gonzalez, Monina Ilagan-Honorio, Ai Jin Lee, Taline Marcarian, Kristina Mayol-Ngo, Betty Rodman, Susan Sommer, and Filma Villamor are nurses in the cardiothoracic intensive care unit at Ronald Reagan University of California Los Angeles Medical Center.

2. Stephanie Fraschilla and Jay Onga are transplant coordinators for the heart and lung transplant program at Ronald Reagan University of California Los Angeles Medical Center.

3. Priscilla Kehoe is the director of research and Sumiko Takayanagi is a senior statistician in the School of Nursing at the University of California Los Angeles.

4. Pamela S. Miller is a postdoctoral scholar in the School of Nursing at the University of California San Francisco.

5. David Ross is a physician, professor, and medical director of the lung and heart-lung transplant program and S. Samuel Weigt is a physician and assistant professor in the Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California Los Angeles Medical Center.

6. Joy Toyama is a DrPH student in the Department of Biostatistics and a graduate student researcher in the School of Nursing at the University of California Los Angeles.

7. Anna Gawlinski is the director of research and evidence-based practice at Ronald Reagan University of California Los Angeles Medical Center and adjunct professor in the School of Nursing at the University of California Los Angeles.

Abstract

Background Chest physiotherapy and high-frequency chest wall oscillation (HFCWO) are routinely used after lung transplant to facilitate removal of secretions. To date, no studies have been done to investigate which therapy is more comfortable and preferred by lung transplant recipients. Patients who have less pain may mobilize secretions, heal, and recover faster. Objectives To compare effects of HFCWO versus chest physiotherapy on pain and preference in lung transplant recipients. Methods In a 2-group experimental, repeated-measures design, 45 lung transplant recipients (27 single lung, 18 bilateral) were randomized to chest physiotherapy (10 AM, 2 PM) followed by HFCWO (6 PM, 10 PM; group 1, n=22) or vice versa (group 2, n=23) on postoperative day 3. A verbal numeric rating scale was used to measure pain before and after treatment. At the end of the treatment sequence, a 4-item patient survey was administered to assess treatment preference, pain, and effectiveness. Data were analyzed with χ2 and t tests and repeated-measures analysis of variance. Results A significant interaction was found between mean difference in pain scores from before to after treatment and treatment method; pain scores decreased more when HFCWO was done at 10 AM and 6 PM (P =.04). Bilateral transplant recipients showed a significant preference for HFCWO over chest physiotherapy (11 [85%] vs 2 [15%], P=.01). However, single lung recipients showed no significant difference in preference between the 2 treatments (11 [42%] vs 14 [54%]). Conclusions HFCWO seems to provide greater decreases in pain scores than does chest physiotherapy. Bilateral lung transplant recipients preferred HFCWO to chest physiotherapy. HFCWO may be an effective, feasible alternative to chest physiotherapy. (American Journal of Critical Care. 2013;22:115–125)

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care,General Medicine

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