Clinical characterization and possible pathophysiological causes of the Deventilation Syndrome in COPD

In daily routine, many COPD patients report early onset augmented dyspnea following use of NIV (Deventilation Syndrome, DVS) as a negative side-effect. The aim of this study is the clinical characterization and concrete definition of DVS. This monocenter prospective observational study collected dem...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scientific reports 2022-01, Vol.12 (1), p.1099-1099, Article 1099
Hauptverfasser: Schellenberg, Mavi Dorothea, Imach, Sandra, Iberl, Gabriele, Kirchner, Marietta, Herth, Felix, Trudzinski, Franziska
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In daily routine, many COPD patients report early onset augmented dyspnea following use of NIV (Deventilation Syndrome, DVS) as a negative side-effect. The aim of this study is the clinical characterization and concrete definition of DVS. This monocenter prospective observational study collected demographic, physiologic and symptomatic data from 67 in-patients with severe COPD Gold III–IV and chronic hypercapnic failure before, during and after use of an established NIV. During their inpatient follow-up, we examined patients during the first hour after termination of nocturnal NIV. DVS was defined by the authors as an increase of ≥ 2 points on the Borg scale during the first 30 min in patients who reported repeated dyspnea after the use of NIV. We monitored cardiovascular and respiratory data and measured diaphragm excursion. Subjective dyspnea was documented by use of the Borg scale and questionnaires. In addition, respirator and demographic data were collected. DVS occurred in 58% of our COPD patient collective, showing predominant emphysema phenotype. Patients with DVS were more severely ill than non-DVS concerning bronchial obstruction (FEV1 0.6 vs. 0.8 l, p  
ISSN:2045-2322
2045-2322
DOI:10.1038/s41598-022-05118-w