Incentive Spirometry to Prevent Acute Pulmonary Complications in Sickle Cell Diseases

  • Bellet P
  • Kalinyak K
  • Shukla R
  • et al.
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Abstract

Background This study was designed to determine the incidence of thoracic bone infarction in patients with sickle cell diseases who were hospitalized with acute chest or back pain above the diaphragm and to test the hypothesis that incentive spirometry can decrease the incidence of atelectasis and pulmonary infiltrates. Methods We conducted a prospective, randomized trial in 29 patients between 8 and 21 years of age with sickle cell diseases who had 38 episodes of acute chest or back pain above the diaphragm and were hospitalized. Each episode of pain was considered to be an independent event. At each hospitalization, patients with normal or unchanged chest radiographs on admission were randomly assigned to treatment with spirometry or to a control nonspirometry group. Each patient in the spirometry group took 10 maximal inspirations using an incentive spirometer every two hours between 8 a.m. and 10 p.m. and while awake during the night until the chest pain subsided. A second radiograph was obtained thre...

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Bellet, P. S., Kalinyak, K. A., Shukla, R., Gelfand, M. J., & Rucknagel, D. L. (1995). Incentive Spirometry to Prevent Acute Pulmonary Complications in Sickle Cell Diseases. New England Journal of Medicine, 333(11), 699–703. https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm199509143331104

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