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Respiratory Rehabilitation in Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis: clinical and biochemical impact

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Respiratory exercise in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
Publication . Pinto, Susana; Swash, Michael; Carvalho, Mamede
We have evaluated the potential role of respiratory exercise by implementing specific inspiratory muscle training in a selected population of early-affected amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients. We studied 26 patients with ALS with normal respiratory function using two groups of patients in a parallel, control-group, randomized, delayed-start design. Patients in the first group (G1) started the active inspiratory exercise programme at entry and were followed for eight months, while the second group (G2) of patients followed a placebo exercise programme for the first four months and then active exercise for the second four-month period. The primary outcome measure was the ALSFRS. Respiratory tests, neurophysiological measurements, fatigue and quality of life scales were secondary outcomes. Analysis of covariance was used to compare changes between and within groups. Results showed that there was no significant difference between the two patient groups. Within-group analysis suggested that inspiratory exercise promotes a transient improvement in the respiratory subscore and in the maximal voluntary ventilation, peak expiratory flow, and sniff inspiratory pressure. In conclusion, there was no clear positive or negative outcome of the respiratory exercise protocol we have proposed, but we cannot rule out a minor positive effect. Exercise regimes merit more detailed clinical evaluation in ALS.
Changes of the phrenic nerve motor response in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis : longitudinal study
Publication . Pinto, Susana; Geraldes, Ruth; Vaz, Nuno; Pinto, Anabela; Carvalho, Mamede
Objective: Phrenic nerve motor amplitude (Diaphr Ampl) is predictive of hypoventilation in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We aimed to evaluate its change over disease course and to correlate it to other measurements. Methods: Forty-nine unselected patients (35 men, 13 bulbar-onset, 56.5+/-8.9 years) with definitive or probable ALS were included. They were evaluated at entry (time 0) and 4-6 months (5.2+/-1.0) later (time 1) with: functional ALS rating scale (ALS-FRS) and respiratory subscore (ALS-FRSr); forced vital capacity (FVC); maximal inspiratory pressure (MIP); mean O(2) saturation overnight (SpO(2)mean); sniff maximal inspiratory pressure (SNIP); Diaphr Ampl and mean amplitude of the ulnar nerve response (ADM Ampl). Results: ALS-FRS, ALS-FRSr, Diaphr Ampl, FVC, SNIP, ADM Ampl (p<0.01) and SpO(2)mean (p<0.05) declined significantly. MIP did not change significantly (p=0.203). Coefficient of variation was similar for FVC, Diaphr Ampl, ADM Ampl and ALS-FRS but higher for SNIP. The percentage of change for Diaphr Ampl was significantly correlated to FVC and SNIP, but not to ADM Ampl or ALS-FRS. Conclusions: Diaphr Ampl decreased significantly in a short period of time and its change is correlated to other respiratory tests. This test can be useful in patients with marked facial weakness or uncooperative. Significance: Diaphr Ampl is useful to monitor respiratory function in ALS patients and can be applied in clinical trials.
Awaji criteria for the diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis : a systematic review
Publication . Costa, João; Swash, Michael; Carvalho, Mamede
Objective: To estimate the potential diagnostic added value of the Awaji criteria for diagnosis of a myotrophiclateral sclerosis (ALS), which have been compared with the previously accepted gold standard the revised El Escorial criteria in several studies. Data sources: MEDLINE and Web of Science (until October2011). Study selection: We searched for studies testing the diagnostic accuracy of the Awaji criteria vs the revised El Escorial criteria in patients referred with suspected ALS. Data extraction: Evaluation and data extraction of identified studies were done independently. The Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies list was used to assess study quality. We determined the proportion of patients classified as having probable/definite ALS and derived indices of diagnostic performance(sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic odds ratio). Quantitative data synthesis was accomplished through random-effects meta-analysis, and heterogeneity was assessed with the I2 test. Data synthesis: Eight studies were included (3 prospective and 5 retrospective) enrolling 1187 patients. Application of Awaji criteria led to a 23% (95% CI, 12% to 33%; I2=84%) increase in the proportion of patients classified as having probable/definite ALS. Diagnostic performance of the Awaji criteria was higher than the revised El Escorial criteria (pooled sensitivity: 81.1% [95%CI, 72.2% to 90.0%; I2=91%] vs 62.2% [95% CI, 49.4%to 75.1%; I2=93%]; pooled diagnostic odds ratio, 35.8[95% CI, 15.2 to 84.7; I2=3%] vs 8.7 [95% CI, 2.2 to 35.6;I2=50%]). Diagnostic accuracy of Awaji criteria was higher in bulbar- than in limb-onset cases. Conclusion: The Awaji criteria have a significant clinical impact allowing earlier diagnosis and clinical trial entry in ALS.

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Entidade financiadora

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

Programa de financiamento

5646-ICCMS

Número da atribuição

PIC/IC/82765/2007

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