Clinical Trial: Acute Effect of Pulmonary Desufflation on Cardiac Performance in COPD Patients

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Interventional




Official Title: Acute Effect of Pulmonary Desufflation on Cardiac Performance in COPD Patients in Stable Conditions. Pilot Study

Brief Summary:

Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary disease (COPD) is one of the major clinical entities that causes thousands of deaths every year all over the world and weights a lot on the health care system of every country in terms of direct and indirect costs. The physiopathological modifications that characterise COPD are represented by irreversible (sometimes partially reversible) airflow obstruction, and bronchiolar inflammation. Lungs that develop emphysema lack of elastic recoil and imply increased resistances and airflow obstruction due to loss of lung parenchyma and supporting elastic structures. All these modifications produce air trapping and so lung hyperinflation. The latter is precisely the cause of the symptoms and particularly dyspnoea which is often heavily perceived by COPD patients and that drives to the limitation of daily activities. Lung hyperinflation and the other alterations that occur in COPD imply gas retention and increase in pulmonary vascular resistances. Considering that the rib cage has limited elastic properties, the effects of gas trapping and lung parenchymal damage on mediastinum and particularly on heart mechanics is indisputable. Together with alveolar hypoxia, lung hyperinflation is responsible for the development, as the disease progresses, of the cor pulmonale. Tha latter causes pulmonary hypertension and increased mechanic load during right heart chambers contraction and relaxation. Those alterations may effect left heart chambers too.

Airflow obstruction in COPD is usually treated by inhaled bronchodilators and corticosteroids. The main and most used bronchodilators are represented by beta 2 agonists (short, long and ultra-long acting) and anticholinergic inhalatory drugs, which can be also short, long and ultra long acting. Among ultra long acting beta 2 agonists, indacaterol is characterised by quick onset of action (5 minutes), and guarantees a