Last updated 3 months ago

CardioBreathApp vs IMT in Heart Failure

40 patients around the world
Available in Brazil
The impact of pulmonary, ventilatory and cardiovascular impairment in patients with congestive heart failure (CHF) highlights the therapeutic relevance of breathing exercises for these functions. In addition, other benefits such as lowering blood pressure,increased cardiac vagal modulation, improved vascular function and psychosocial handling (anxiety, depression and stress) may be expected. Inspiratory Muscle Training (IMT) and slow yoga breathing are widely endorsed as beneficial by a large amount of evidence. The newly developed app CardioBreath ® is based on a breathing technique of yoga (ujjayi pranayama) through respiratory rates (RR) slower than the user's spontaneous RR, in a set of strategies with pedagogical prescription, guidance and monitoring of this type of exercises. This study aims to compare IMT exercises with those of the CardioBreath ® application on , strength respiratory muscle (manuvacuometry), cardiac vagal modulation (heart rate variability), arterial stiffness (heart rate wave velocity) and diaphragm thickness in CHF patients after their hospital discharge in Institute of Cardiology of Rio Grande do Sul. Methods: Crossover randomized control trial will recruit post-discharge CHF patients who will be evaluated through, Finometer system (HR and BP variability/cardiac vagal modulation), Arterial Stiffness (oscillometric method), for indexes of central arterial pressure, velocity pulse waveform (large artery stiffness) and Aix 75 (small artery stiffness), Respiratory Muscle Strength by Manovacuometry and Diaphragm Thickness by ultrasound. Patients will be randomized to two orders of intervention Group 1- Moment 1 TMI and Moment 2 CardioBreath App Group 2- Moment 1 CardioBreath App and Moment 2 TMI. The interventions will face-to-face assistance once a week for intensity adjustments, with 5 sets of 10 repetitions twice a day during week days for five weeks both for CardioBreath and IMT. Patients will be evaluated immediately after hospital discharge and at the end of the Moment 1, they will carry out a washout period of one week between the moments 1 and 2 and new evaluations before and after moment 2. The data obtained will be analyzed by intention to treat (ITT) and presented as means (M) ± standard deviation (SD). Will be tested for normality through the test by Shapiro Wilk. Differences between interventions will be detected through Student's t-test for paired samples. Correlations between variables will be obtained by Pearson's correlations for parametric and Spearman for non-parametric data, with significance level p< 0.05. Expected Results: Although there is no data comparing IMT and slow breathing in CHF patients, significant results are expected in the two intervention groups, and differences between both protocols will point to their specific applicability.
Instituto de Cardiologia do Rio Grande do Sul
40Patients around the world
This study is for people with
Heart failure
Requirements for the patient
To 70 Years
All Gender
Medical requirements
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