Heterogenous treatment effects following inspiratory muscle training during recovery from post-acute COVID-19 syndrome
Heterogenous treatment effects following inspiratory muscle training during recovery from post-acute COVID-19 syndrome
Purpose: to investigate whether heterogeneous treatment effects occur for changes in inspiratory muscle strength, perceived dyspnoea, and health-related quality of life (QoL), following eight-weeks unsupervised home-based inspiratory muscle training (IMT) in adults with post-acute COVID-19 syndrome.
Methods: in total, 147 adults with self-reported prior COVID-19 either completed an eight-week home-based IMT intervention (n = 111; 92 females; 48 ± 11 years; 9.3 ± 3.6 months post-acute COVID-19 infection) or acted as “usual care” wait list controls (n = 36; 34 females; 49 ± 12 years; 9.4 ± 3.2 months post-acute COVID-19 infection).
Results: applying a Bayesian framework, we found clear evidence of heterogeneity of treatment response for inspiratory muscle strength: the estimated difference between standard deviations (SDs) of the IMT and control groups was 22.8 cmH2O (75% Credible Interval (CrI): 4.7-37.7) for changes in maximal inspiratory pressure (MIP), and 86.8 pressure time-units (PTUs; 75% CrI: 55.7-116.7) for sustained MIP (SMIP). Conversely, there were minimal differences in the SDs between the IMT and the control group for changes in perceived dyspnoea and health-related QoL, providing no evidence of heterogeneous treatment effects. Higher cumulative power during the IMT intervention was related to changes in MIP (ß = 10.9 [95% CrI: 5.3-16.8] cmH2O per 1SD) and SMIP (ß = 63.7 [32.2-95.3] PTUs per 1SD), clearly indicating an IMT dose response for changes in inspiratory muscle strength. Older age (>50 years), a longer time post-acute COVID-19 (>3 months), and greater severity of dyspnoea at baseline were also associated with smaller improvements in inspiratory muscle strength.
Conclusions: heterogenous individual responses occurred following an eight-week home-based IMT programme in people with post-acute COVID-19 syndrome. Consistent with standard exercise theory, larger improvements in inspiratory muscle strength are strongly related to a greater cumulative dose of IMT.
post-acute covid-19 syndrome, long covid, rehabilitation, treatment, breathlessness, breathing
1761-1769
Metcalfe, Richard S.
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Swinton, Paul A.
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Mackintosh, Kelly A.
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Berg, Ronan M. G.
63dd6c1c-2cd2-4acd-9a02-05ac0654a562
Shelley, James
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Saynor, Zoe L.
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Hudson, Joanne
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Duckers, Jamie
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Lewis, Keir
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Davies, Gwyneth A.
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McNarry, Melitta A.
41b60ac5-2ab3-43a5-9379-64be21517863
October 2023
Metcalfe, Richard S.
13fcb0a2-ac0c-4d80-a9c5-a1050ba739d8
Swinton, Paul A.
99466641-1db3-4a41-b29e-fb7df9c22a0c
Mackintosh, Kelly A.
8f43d18a-f667-444e-a0f6-64c28196e19b
Berg, Ronan M. G.
63dd6c1c-2cd2-4acd-9a02-05ac0654a562
Shelley, James
0d467abf-a396-40a1-b7e4-9976413e47a0
Saynor, Zoe L.
a4357c7d-db59-4fa5-b24f-58d2f7e74e39
Hudson, Joanne
dda8c59b-1bc5-4113-b583-444fd76d5e21
Duckers, Jamie
5fd637d6-b2bd-448f-9646-884064a0727c
Lewis, Keir
85dc5ef3-2137-4a7f-bda3-14b124b89fe2
Davies, Gwyneth A.
842455c0-70d8-4ea7-a87f-004f55e4a1bc
McNarry, Melitta A.
41b60ac5-2ab3-43a5-9379-64be21517863
Metcalfe, Richard S., Swinton, Paul A., Mackintosh, Kelly A., Berg, Ronan M. G., Shelley, James, Saynor, Zoe L., Hudson, Joanne, Duckers, Jamie, Lewis, Keir, Davies, Gwyneth A. and McNarry, Melitta A.
(2023)
Heterogenous treatment effects following inspiratory muscle training during recovery from post-acute COVID-19 syndrome.
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, 55 (10), .
(doi:10.1249/MSS.0000000000003207).
Abstract
Purpose: to investigate whether heterogeneous treatment effects occur for changes in inspiratory muscle strength, perceived dyspnoea, and health-related quality of life (QoL), following eight-weeks unsupervised home-based inspiratory muscle training (IMT) in adults with post-acute COVID-19 syndrome.
Methods: in total, 147 adults with self-reported prior COVID-19 either completed an eight-week home-based IMT intervention (n = 111; 92 females; 48 ± 11 years; 9.3 ± 3.6 months post-acute COVID-19 infection) or acted as “usual care” wait list controls (n = 36; 34 females; 49 ± 12 years; 9.4 ± 3.2 months post-acute COVID-19 infection).
Results: applying a Bayesian framework, we found clear evidence of heterogeneity of treatment response for inspiratory muscle strength: the estimated difference between standard deviations (SDs) of the IMT and control groups was 22.8 cmH2O (75% Credible Interval (CrI): 4.7-37.7) for changes in maximal inspiratory pressure (MIP), and 86.8 pressure time-units (PTUs; 75% CrI: 55.7-116.7) for sustained MIP (SMIP). Conversely, there were minimal differences in the SDs between the IMT and the control group for changes in perceived dyspnoea and health-related QoL, providing no evidence of heterogeneous treatment effects. Higher cumulative power during the IMT intervention was related to changes in MIP (ß = 10.9 [95% CrI: 5.3-16.8] cmH2O per 1SD) and SMIP (ß = 63.7 [32.2-95.3] PTUs per 1SD), clearly indicating an IMT dose response for changes in inspiratory muscle strength. Older age (>50 years), a longer time post-acute COVID-19 (>3 months), and greater severity of dyspnoea at baseline were also associated with smaller improvements in inspiratory muscle strength.
Conclusions: heterogenous individual responses occurred following an eight-week home-based IMT programme in people with post-acute COVID-19 syndrome. Consistent with standard exercise theory, larger improvements in inspiratory muscle strength are strongly related to a greater cumulative dose of IMT.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 12 May 2023
Published date: October 2023
Keywords:
post-acute covid-19 syndrome, long covid, rehabilitation, treatment, breathlessness, breathing
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Local EPrints ID: 493848
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493848
ISSN: 0195-9131
PURE UUID: e5bf906a-c3d1-4c08-8805-16cb2d88fb50
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Date deposited: 16 Sep 2024 16:32
Last modified: 17 Sep 2024 02:09
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Contributors
Author:
Richard S. Metcalfe
Author:
Paul A. Swinton
Author:
Kelly A. Mackintosh
Author:
Ronan M. G. Berg
Author:
James Shelley
Author:
Zoe L. Saynor
Author:
Joanne Hudson
Author:
Jamie Duckers
Author:
Keir Lewis
Author:
Gwyneth A. Davies
Author:
Melitta A. McNarry
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