Site Logo background

Home

· Home

· Site Map

· Contact me

· Browsealoud

· Disability Blog

· Website Awards

· Disclaimer

Donate now

· Benefit Bar

· Cerebral Palsy Support - Donate now

Advertising and Marketing

· Our partners

· Advertise your Business

Shopping

· Shop till you drop

· Shop till you drop in USA

· Special Needs Store

· Games Store

Living in Society

· Living in society

Bodyworks

· How the Body Works

Neurological Disorders

· Neurology

Congenital disorders

· What is a Congenital disorder

Bones and Orthopaedic Disorders

· Bone and Orthopaedic Problems

Heritable Disorders

· What is Marfan Syndrome

Gastric Disorders

· What is Reflux

Autoimmune Disorders

· What is Autoimmunity

Rehabilitation

· Rehabilitation

Caregivers and Homecare

· Caregivers

Disability Discrimination

· Disability Discrimination

Stem Cell Research

· Stem Cell Research

Personal injury and Solicitors

· Injury claims

· Underdog

· Medical Negligence

· Accident Claims

· Compensation

· Personal Injury Claims

· Cerebral Palsy Compensation Claims

· Injury Claim

· Clinical Negligence Solicitors

· Personal Injury Solicitors

Resources

· Disability Links

· Stannah Stairlifts

· Free Eye Tests

· Wheelchairs

· Ableize Mobility Directory

· Life Insurance UK

Community

· MySpace Support Group

· Book Reviews

· Games Store

Rehabilitation

  • Chest therapy
  • Complementary Medicine
  • Conductive Eduction
  • COPD Patients


  • Dolphin Therapy
  • Dr Nick Carter
  • Rehab, Exercise, Games
  • HBOT Therapy
  • Horse Riding
  • Hydrotherapy


  • Light Therapy
  • Magnet Therapy
  • Neurorehabilitation


  • Massage Systems
  • Pain Relief


  • Physiotherapy



  • Repetive Strain Injury (RSI)
  • Speech and Language
  • Spider Therapy
  • 'Sitting To Standing' Movement
  • Yoga
  • Stroke Survivors
  • Research


  • Therapy Links
  • Therapies - FAQ
  • More Therapies - FAQ
  • True Life Stories
  • Therapy Organisations
  • COPD Patients Benefit More From Pulmonary Rehab In Earlier Stages

    21 May 2008

    Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) who are in their final years of survival do not get the same benefits from pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) as patients who have more years left to live - regardless of their age, complicating illnesses or lung function, according to new research funded by the Veteran's Administration, which was presented at the American Thoracic Society's 2008 International Conference in Toronto on Tuesday, May 20.

    The researchers recruited 106 patients with COPD who completed an eight-week course of PR. Each patient was evaluated at the beginning and the conclusion of the course for exercise capacity, dyspnea in daily activities, such as walking and carrying groceries, fatigue, quality of life, and other indices of health. The researchers then compared the results of patients who died within two years of the program to those who survived longer and found that even after controlling for potentially complicating factors - such as lung function, age and other present illnesses - patients who lived longer than two years were able to obtain more positive results from their PR program than those who had end-stage COPD (defined retrospectively as having died within two years of the program).

    "Although people who died within two years after entering a pulmonary rehabilitation program improved their exercise capacity during the program, they improved less on this and other key variables than did those who lived longer," said Bonnie Steele, A.R.N.P., Ph.D., a respiratory clinical nurse specialist at the VA Puget Sound Health Care System in Seattle. "The finding was independent of age, lung function and the number of other illnesses they had."

    The researchers anticipated that those with end-stage COPD would be more ill with lung or other diseases. "Previous work has taught us that even with severe obstructive lung disease based upon pulmonary function, people can derive significant benefits from PR," said Dr. Steele, "but our limited findings suggest that other, presently unappreciated factors present at end of life may contribute to poorer outcomes in end-stage patients with respect to exercise capacity and quality of life."

    There are several possible explanations for the findings, including the possibility that patients in end-stage disease have overall poorer muscle function and greater levels of deconditioning and the possible specific impact of selected co-morbidities, such as heart failure.

    "Our sample was too small to explicate this fully," said Dr. Steele, "but it suggests that treatments for end-stage patients with COPD may still be effective and introducing exercise training sooner in the course of their disease results in more improvement."

    ----------------------------
    Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
    ----------------------------

    Source: Keely Savoie
    American Thoracic Society

    Article URL: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/108267.php


    Hosted by Sirius Pro Web Design & Build