20 years of neuromuscular electrical stimulation in COPD.

Published
March 21, 2024
Journal
European respiratory review : an official journal of the European Respiratory Society
PICOID
93366b82
DOI
Citations
1
Keywords
Copyright
Copyright ©The authors 2024.
Patients/Population/Participants

COPD patients

Intervention

neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES)

Comparison

exercise

Outcome

physical activity, exercise tolerance, quality of life, survival

Abstract

P
I
C
O

Although a lung disease, COPD is also associated with extrapulmonary manifestations including, among others, limb muscle dysfunction. Limb muscle dysfunction is a key systemic consequence of COPD that impacts patients' physical activity, exercise tolerance, quality of life and survival. Deconditioning is the main mechanism underlying the development of limb muscle dysfunction in COPD, which can be partially improved with exercise. However, some patients may not be able to tolerate exercise because of incapacitating breathlessness or unwillingness to undertake whole-body exercise. Alternative training modalities that do not give rise to dyspnoea, such as neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES), are urged. Over the past 20 years, NMES in COPD has presented conflicting conclusions in meta-analysis. In this review, we try to understand the reason for this result by analysing possible biases and factors that brought conflicting conclusions. We discuss the population (the intervention group, but also the control group), the outcome measures, the frequency of stimulation, the rehabilitation protocol (

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