Pilot study of physiotherapist-led versus music therapist-led breathing control exercises for young adults living with breathing pattern disorder: a randomised controlled trial protocol
Pilot study of physiotherapist-led versus music therapist-led breathing control exercises for young adults living with breathing pattern disorder: a randomised controlled trial protocol
Introduction: breathing pattern disorder (BPD) is an abnormal breathing pattern associated with biochemical, biomechanical and psychophysiological changes. While physiotherapy is often offered, limited evidence-based therapies for BPD are available. Music therapy-based singing exercises have been shown to improve quality of life for individuals with respiratory conditions and may also be beneficial for individuals living with BPD. No study has previously compared these participatory interventions in the treatment of people living with BPD.
Methods and analysis: this is a study protocol for an assessor blinded 1:1 randomised controlled trial and qualitative interview study. Forty participants aged 18–40 years who score at least 19 on the Nijmegen Questionnaire (NQ) and do not have any underlying respiratory conditions will be recruited. Participants will be randomised to receive either physiotherapy-led or music therapy-led breathing exercises for 6 weeks. The primary outcome will be between-group difference in NQ post-intervention. Semistructured interviews with a purposive sample of participants will be performed. Qualitative data will be analysed using thematic analysis to better understand participants’ intervention and trial experiences.
Ethics and dissemination: this study has received ethical approval by Brunel University London College of Health, Medicine and Life Science’s Research Ethics Committee (32483-MHR-Mar/2022-38624-3). The anonymised completed dataset will be made available as an open-access file via Brunel University London Figshare and the manuscript containing anonymised patient data will be published in an open-access journal.
Trial registration number: this trial is registered on the Open Science Framework Registry (https://osf.io/u3ncw).
Lewis, Adam
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Kal, Elmar
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Nolan, Claire Marie
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Cave, Phoene
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Grillo, Lizzie
d7d2be63-2678-45ab-b34f-e271f866662b
Conway, Joy
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Jones, Mandy
1bc232df-1805-40df-8ea9-232939a1517e
Lewis, Adam
71c83b66-d847-4aee-b716-b04d6de51450
Kal, Elmar
04e17d07-b575-4873-8ca3-3a4032062db6
Nolan, Claire Marie
0fa0155e-1555-40b3-b51d-c5b2faf64b63
Cave, Phoene
37cd6b00-7a8b-4001-b1ed-f949b6979231
Grillo, Lizzie
d7d2be63-2678-45ab-b34f-e271f866662b
Conway, Joy
bbe9a2e4-fb85-4d4a-a38c-0c1832c32d06
Jones, Mandy
1bc232df-1805-40df-8ea9-232939a1517e
Lewis, Adam, Kal, Elmar, Nolan, Claire Marie, Cave, Phoene, Grillo, Lizzie, Conway, Joy and Jones, Mandy
(2022)
Pilot study of physiotherapist-led versus music therapist-led breathing control exercises for young adults living with breathing pattern disorder: a randomised controlled trial protocol.
BMJ Open Respiratory Research, 9, [e001414].
(doi:10.1136/bmjresp-2022-001414).
Abstract
Introduction: breathing pattern disorder (BPD) is an abnormal breathing pattern associated with biochemical, biomechanical and psychophysiological changes. While physiotherapy is often offered, limited evidence-based therapies for BPD are available. Music therapy-based singing exercises have been shown to improve quality of life for individuals with respiratory conditions and may also be beneficial for individuals living with BPD. No study has previously compared these participatory interventions in the treatment of people living with BPD.
Methods and analysis: this is a study protocol for an assessor blinded 1:1 randomised controlled trial and qualitative interview study. Forty participants aged 18–40 years who score at least 19 on the Nijmegen Questionnaire (NQ) and do not have any underlying respiratory conditions will be recruited. Participants will be randomised to receive either physiotherapy-led or music therapy-led breathing exercises for 6 weeks. The primary outcome will be between-group difference in NQ post-intervention. Semistructured interviews with a purposive sample of participants will be performed. Qualitative data will be analysed using thematic analysis to better understand participants’ intervention and trial experiences.
Ethics and dissemination: this study has received ethical approval by Brunel University London College of Health, Medicine and Life Science’s Research Ethics Committee (32483-MHR-Mar/2022-38624-3). The anonymised completed dataset will be made available as an open-access file via Brunel University London Figshare and the manuscript containing anonymised patient data will be published in an open-access journal.
Trial registration number: this trial is registered on the Open Science Framework Registry (https://osf.io/u3ncw).
Text
e001414.full
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 August 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 14 September 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 488940
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488940
ISSN: 2052-4439
PURE UUID: 83f5bf06-5ae6-4020-8f39-fb749fe662a0
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Date deposited: 09 Apr 2024 17:09
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 02:14
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Contributors
Author:
Adam Lewis
Author:
Elmar Kal
Author:
Claire Marie Nolan
Author:
Phoene Cave
Author:
Lizzie Grillo
Author:
Joy Conway
Author:
Mandy Jones
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