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Clinical Research on Dyspnea
Author Bios
What is Dyspnea?
Currently selected section: What Provokes Dyspnea?
The Nature of Dyspnea
Language of Dyspnea
Clinical Application
Research Application
Variability in Sensations
Challenges in Study
Mechanical Loads and Sense of Effort
Chemoreceptors
Mechanoreceptors
Neuro-Mechanical Dissociation
Phase of Respiration and Dyspnea
Physiology of Dyspnea
Respiratory System
Cardiovascular System
Measuring Dyspnea
Scaling Issues
Qualitative Aspects
Reliability and Validity Overview
Reliability and Validity
Sensitivity and Specificity
Scales
Sensation vs. Perception vs. Symptom
Treating Dyspnea
Why Measure?
Cluster Analysis
Statistical vs. Clinical Significance
Standard Error of Measurement
Measuring Fatigue
Measuring Depression
Measuring Anxiety and Hyperventilation
Measuring Quality of Life
Conclusion

 

Chapter 23: Dyspnea: What Provokes Dyspnea?
        

Consider the following table showing the number of patients selecting various descriptors during the course of the albuterol treatment.

Table 2.1: Number of Patients Selecting Each Descriptor of Dsypnea at Baseline and After Each Albuterol Treatment
Descriptor Pre Post 1 Post 2 Post 3
Tight
16
8
5
6
Breathing more
1
11
12
6
Work
7
3
5
4
Effort
6
5
4

3

Breath does not go out
7
5
4
4
Official journal of the American Thoracic Society. © American Lung Association. Reprinted with permission.

Note that the number of patients selecting chest tightness to describe their breathlessness decreased to a greater degree with successive albuterol treatments than did the sensations of effort and work. A similar phenomenon occurs in patients with COPD, which may produce a variety of sensations emanating from the airways, chest wall, and chemoreceptors. There is no single "dyspnea receptor" which, when stimulated with an electrical impulse, produces a respiratory sensation that is common to all the diseases that are characterized by dyspnea.

Research is increasingly showing that dyspnea symptoms arise from a number of different mechanisms and that these mechanisms lead to qualitatively distinct sensations (Simon et al., 1989; Simon et al., 1990; Mahler et al., 1996). When studying dyspnea, therefore, it is not sufficient to inquire about or measure a global rating of breathing discomfort. Rather, one needs to focus on discrete sensations that are produced by discrete mechanisms.

Finally, dyspnea, like all symptoms, is a subjective experience. A given stimulus, such as a particular level of hypoxemia, will likely produce different intensities of discomfort in different individuals. Furthermore, within a particular individual, the same stimulus may be perceived differently over time as a consequence of experience, expectations, and behavioral factors such as mood.

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