Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2628525 | Complementary Therapies in Clinical Practice | 2014 | 4 Pages |
BackgroundPhysiotherapy in bronchial asthma has given various results.AimTo test a new method focusing on breathing exercise and massage of the thoracic muscles.Patients and methodsTwenty-eight adult patients with a physician-diagnosed asthma were studied during 6 weeks. All patients were prescribed asthma medication. The new method [active group, n = 17) was compared with physical training (control group, n = 12).ResultsPEF was significantly improved (p = 0.001) in the active group, however, FEV1 showed no significant change. The symptoms “tightness of the chest”, “difficult breathing in”, “air hunger”, and the individually dominating symptom (p = 0.001) were significantly reduced in the active group. Exercise-induced breathing troubles and chest expansion were also significantly reduced.ConclusionPhysiotherapy including breathing exercise and massage of the thoracic muscles (the Lotorp method) in patients with physician-diagnosed asthma resulted in significantly reduced respiratory symptoms during rest and exercise and increased chest expansion. The improvements may be due to an increased mobility of the chest and diaphragm.