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Volume 6, Issue 5(Suppl)

Epidemiology (Sunnyvale)

ISSN: 2161-1165 ECR, Open Access

Epidemiology 2016

October 3-5, 2016

Page 44

conference

series

.com

October 3-5, 2016|London, UK

4

th

International Conference on

Epidemiology & Public Health

EXERCISE TRAINING IN COPD

C

OPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease) is associated with exercise & activity limitation, may result from, ventilator

limitation, cardiovascular impairment-and/or skeletal muscle dysfunction. Persons with COPD and other chronic lung

disease often experience barriers to normal functioning. Physical barriers include increased airway resistance, abnormal

breathing mechanics - inadequate gas exchange, weakness of respiratory & skeletal muscles, diaphragmatic flattening, poor

endurance & dyspnea. Emotional barriers include anxiety, depression & fear of dyspnea.

COPD is a difficult challenge. But -diagnostic methods, treatments and Pulmonary Rehabilitation (PR) techniques such

as “Exercise Therapy” (ET) have advanced to the point that people are living productive life while managing their condition.

Four major components of PR education, psychosocial / behavioral intervention outcome assessment & exercise training

the “Core Component” of PR. Outcomes of ET/PR include improved respiratory system control, improved muscle function,

exercise tolerance, quality of life, reduced respiratory hospitalizations & emergency room visits. ET it does improve, physical

conditioning & improved, pacing results, increased walking distance with less, dyspnea emotional benefits e.g. less fear of

dyspnea & desensitization to breathlessness leading to improved quality of life. ET reduces the number of hospitalizations and

number of hospital days for patients with COPD.

Exercise has emerged as a “primary modality for the reversal of deconditioning & for improving quality of life for health

as well as COPD”. Importantly, in contrast to “irreversible abnormalities of lung architecture and airflow obstruction, the

structural, metabolic & physiologic skeletal muscle abnormalities of COPD can be improved by ET. ET can restore the patient to

the highest level of functional capacity for any degree of ventilatory impairment. Exercise cannot reverse the physiological and

structural deficits of COPD, but it can reduce disability by improving endurance, breathing efficiency, and dyspnea tolerance,

especially in severely impaired patients. Patients need encouragement, may also need supplemental oxygen & treatment with

bronchodilators, mucolytics, and/or corticosteroids. Patients who undergo for exercise training in COPD can often increase

their work capacity 70% to 80% within 6 to 12 weeks.

Biography

M B Jani, got the M Sc (Medical) & Ph. D degrees . in Physiology from Medical College, Baroda affiliated to Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda. He was

head, Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine M S University of Baroda. He has UG & PG teaching experience of 34 years. His fields of research work

are, exercise physiology, obesity, hypertension, and COPD. At present Dr. M B Jani is working as Professor, Department of Physiology, Gujarat Adani Institute of

Medical Sciences, Bhuj, Gujarat, India

jani_mb@yahoo.co.in

Madhusudan B Jani, Epidemiology (Sunnyvale), 6:5(Suppl)

http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2161-1165.C1.013

Madhusudan B Jani

Adani Institute of Medical Sciences, India