Center for Healthcare Delivery Science, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA; Division for Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA; Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Division for Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Department of Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA.
Chest. 2019 Sep;156(3):507-517. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2019.04.128. Epub 2019 May 22.
Dyspnea is prevalent among hospitalized patients but little is known about the experience of dyspnea among inpatients. We sought to characterize the multiple sensations and associated emotions of dyspnea in patients admitted with dyspnea to a tertiary care hospital.
We selected patients who reported breathing discomfort of at least 4/10 on admission (10 = unbearable). Research staff recruited 156 patients within 24 hours of admission and evaluated daily patients' current and worst dyspnea with the Multidimensional Dyspnea Profile; patients participated in the study 2.6 days on average. The Multidimensional Dyspnea Profile assesses overall breathing discomfort (A), intensity of five sensory qualities of dyspnea, and 5 negative emotional responses to dyspnea. Patients were also asked to rate whether current levels of dyspnea were "acceptable."
At the time of the first research interview, patients reported slight to moderate dyspnea (A median 4); however, most patients reported experiencing severe dyspnea in the 24 hours before the interview (A mean 7.8). A total of 54% of patients with dyspnea ≥4 on day 1 found the symptom unacceptable. The worst dyspnea each day in the prior 24 hours usually occurred at rest. Dyspnea declined but persisted through hospitalization for most patients. "Air hunger" was the dominant sensation, especially when dyspnea was strong (>4). Anxiety and frustration were the dominant emotions associated with dyspnea.
This first multidimensional portrait of dyspnea in a general inpatient population characterizes the sensations and emotions dyspneic patients endure. The finding that air hunger is the dominant sensation of severe dyspnea has implications for design of laboratory models of these sensations and may have implications for targets of palliation of symptoms.
呼吸困难在住院患者中很常见,但对于住院患者呼吸困难的体验知之甚少。我们旨在描述因呼吸困难而入住三级保健医院的患者的呼吸困难的多种感觉和相关情绪。
我们选择了在入院后至少报告呼吸困难为 4/10(10 表示难以忍受)的患者。研究人员在入院后 24 小时内招募了 156 名患者,并使用多维呼吸困难量表评估患者当前和最严重呼吸困难的情况;患者平均参与研究 2.6 天。多维呼吸困难量表评估整体呼吸不适(A)、呼吸困难的五种感觉质量的强度以及对呼吸困难的 5 种负面情绪反应。患者还被要求对当前的呼吸困难水平是否“可接受”进行评分。
在第一次研究访谈时,患者报告了轻度至中度呼吸困难(A 中位数为 4);然而,大多数患者在访谈前 24 小时报告了严重的呼吸困难(A 平均为 7.8)。在第 1 天呼吸困难≥4 的患者中,有 54%的患者认为该症状不可接受。在过去 24 小时内,每天最严重的呼吸困难通常发生在休息时。对于大多数患者来说,呼吸困难在住院期间虽有所缓解但仍持续存在。“空气饥饿感”是主要感觉,尤其是当呼吸困难较强(>4)时。焦虑和沮丧是与呼吸困难相关的主要情绪。
这是一般住院患者中首次对呼吸困难进行多维描述,描述了呼吸困难患者所经历的感觉和情绪。发现“空气饥饿感”是严重呼吸困难的主要感觉,这对这些感觉的实验室模型设计具有意义,并可能对症状缓解的目标具有意义。