High-flow nasal cannula therapy (HFNT) is effective in reducing the intensity of the sensory and affective components of dyspnoea, independent of oxygen addition, suggests a study.
“Persistent dyspnoea is a public health issue for which the therapeutic arsenal is limited,” the authors said. “This study tested HFNT as a means to alleviate experimental dyspnoea.”
In this study, 32 healthy participants underwent experimental dyspnoea induced by thoracoabdominal elastic loading and received HFNT with alternate FiO2 of 100 percent (HFNT100) or 21 percent (HFNT21).
The authors continuously monitored the sensory (S-VAS) and affective (A-VAS) components of dyspnoea, transcutaneous CO2 pressure (PtcCO2), pulse-oximetry oxygen saturation (SpO2), heart rate, respiratory rate, and skin galvanometry.
Three 8-min experimental sessions were also carried out. The first session involved familiarization with the experimental dyspnoea, while the other two sessions examined the effects of HFNT100 and HFNT21 in a randomized order.
Both HFNT21 and HFNT100 markedly improved dyspnoea, with no significant difference between the two conditions: HFNT21 (∆A-VAS, 0.80 cm, −0.02 to 1.5; p=0.007; ∆S-VAS, 0.70 cm, −0.15 to 1.98; p<0.0001) and HFNT100 (∆A-VAS, 1.00 cm, 0.08–1.75; p<0.0001; ∆S-VAS, 0.70 cm, 0.08–1.95; p=0.0002).
Notably, HFNT showed no significant impact on either the respiratory or heart rate and reduced PtcCO2 only on room air and GSR under both experimental conditions.
“This relief of laboratory dyspnoea could result from a reduction of afferent-reafferent mismatch,” the authors said.