Title of article :
Association of change in depression and anxiety symptoms with functional outcomes in pulmonary rehabilitation patients
Author/Authors :
Pirraglia، نويسنده , , Paul A. and Casserly، نويسنده , , Brian and Velasco، نويسنده , , Robert and Borgia، نويسنده , , Matthew L. and Nici، نويسنده , , Linda، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Pages :
5
From page :
45
To page :
49
Abstract :
Objective ary rehabilitation (PR) has emerged over the last decade as an essential component of an integrated approach to managing patients with chronic respiratory diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). We sought to examine how depression and anxiety symptom changes relate to disease-specific quality of life outcomes following PR. s formed a cohort study of 81 patients with COPD who completed PR at a Veterans Administration Medical Center. Pulmonary rehabilitation consisted of supervised exercise training and education twice weekly for 8 weeks. Beck Depression and Anxiety Inventories (BDI and BAI) assessed symptom burden at baseline and completion of PR. We measured change in disease-specific quality of life using the dyspnea, mastery, emotion and fatigue domains of the Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire Self-Reported (CRQ-SR) from baseline to completion of PR. s ipants were 69.8±9.1 years old and all male. Forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) was 1.23±0.39 L. The CRQ-SR scores improved significantly: dyspnea (P<.0001), mastery (P=.015) and fatigue (P=.017). The BDI scores improved significantly (13.1±10.5 to 10.8±9.9, P=.003; BAI: 13.1±10.1 to 12.1±11.7). Multivariate regression models controlling for age, FEV1, depression treatment and anxiety treatment showed that improvement in depressive symptoms were associated with improvement in fatigue (P=.003), emotion (P=.003) and mastery (P=.01). Anxiety symptom change was not significantly associated with change in disease-specific quality of life domains. sion sing anxiety symptoms in PR patients may be indicated because disease-specific quality of life improvement appears to be associated with mood.
Keywords :
Rehabilitation , pulmonary disease , Chronic Obstructive , depression , Anxiety
Journal title :
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Serial Year :
2011
Journal title :
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Record number :
1743601
Link To Document :
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