Metadata only
Autor(in)
Alle anzeigen
Datum
2020-11Typ
- Journal Article
ETH Bibliographie
no
Altmetrics
Abstract
Purpose: (1) To determine whether healthy humans can distinguish between the intensity and unpleasantness of exertional dyspnoea; (2) to evaluate the reliability of qualitative dyspnoea descriptors during exercise; and (3) to assess the reliability of the Multidimensional Dyspnoea Profile (MDP) Methods: Forty-four healthy participants (24M:20F, 25 ± 5 years) completed maximal incremental cycling tests on three visits. During visit 1, participants rated the intensity and unpleasantness of dyspnoea simultaneously throughout exercise using the modified 0–10 category-ratio Borg scale. On visits 2 and 3, participants rated either the intensity or unpleasantness of dyspnoea alone at the same measurement times as visit 1. On all visits, participants selected qualitative descriptors throughout all exercise intensities from a list of 4, selected relevant qualitative descriptors from a list of 15 at peak exercise, and completed the MDP. Results: Participants rated their dyspnoea intensity significantly higher for a given minute ventilation (V˙ E) compared to dyspnoea unpleasantness (dyspnoea-V˙ E slope: 0.08 ± 0.02 vs. 0.07 ± 0.03 Borg 0–10/L min−1, p < 0.001) during visit 1. The onset of intensity ratings occurred at a significantly lower work rate compared to unpleasantness ratings measured on the same exercise test (52 ± 41 vs. 91 ± 53 watts, p < 0.001). Dyspnoea intensity and unpleasantness remained significantly different for a given ventilation even when measured independently on separate exercise tests (p < 0.05). There was good-to-excellent reliability (ICC > 0.60) for the use of qualitative dyspnoea descriptors and the MDP to measure dyspnoea at peak exercise. Conclusion: Exercise-induced dyspnoea in healthy adults can differ in the sensory and affective dimensions, and can be measured reliably using qualitative descriptors and the MDP. Mehr anzeigen
Publikationsstatus
publishedExterne Links
Zeitschrift / Serie
European Journal of Applied PhysiologyBand
Seiten / Artikelnummer
Verlag
SpringerThema
Sensory; Affective; Descriptors; Multidimensional dyspnoea profile; ReliabilityOrganisationseinheit
08691 - Spengler, Christina (Tit.-Prof.)
ETH Bibliographie
no
Altmetrics