Skip to Content
Interactive Textbook on Clinical Symptom Research Logo


Home Button

Clinical Research on Dyspnea
Author Bios
What is Dyspnea?
What Provokes Dyspnea?
The Nature of Dyspnea
Currently selected section: 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: Assessing Desirability of Outcome Stats: Language of Dyspnea
        

You Answered:

Selection: No 

Incorrect

Using an approach called "cluster analysis," investigators are able to determine whether the descriptors form one or more groups in which the members of a group are more similar to each other than to descriptors in another group (Simon et al., 1989, 1990; Elliott et al., 1991). Some phrases tend to be selected together, others are rarely grouped. Relationships can then be determined between clusters and particular conditions that produce dyspnea.

Table 4.3: Groupings of phrases chosen from a dyspnea questionnaire to characterize their breathing discomfort by 53 patients with a range of hysiologic and pathologic conditions leading to dyspnea.
Clusters*

Cluster Name

Descriptive Phrase
1. In
My breath does not go in all the way.
2. Deep
I cannot take a deep breath.
3. Stops
I feel that my breath stops.
4. Gasping
I am gasping for breath.
5. Rapid
I feel that my breathing is rapid.
6. More
I feel that I am breathing more.
7. Exhalation
My breath does not go out all the way.
8. Concentration
My breathing requires more concentration.
9. Suffocating
I feel that I am smothering.
I feel that I am suffocating.
10. Hunger

I feel a hunger for more air.
I feel out of breath.
I cannot get enough air.

11. Heavy
My breathing requires effort.
My breathing is heavy.
12. Effort
My breathing requires effort.
I feel out of breath.
My breathing requires more work.
13. Tight
My chest feels tight.
My chest is constricted.
14. Shallow My breathing requires more work.
My breathing is shallow.
* K = 2 (degree of overlap) and q = 0.811 (similarity level)
Official journal of the American Thoracic Society. © American Lung Association. Reprinted with permission.

 

Back to Question