Does inspiratory muscle training improve lung function and quality of life in people with inclusion body myositis? A pilot study

Abstract

Inclusion Body Myositis is the most common acquired myositis in adults, predominantly weakening forearm flexor and knee extensor muscles. Subclinical respiratory muscle weakness has recently been recognised in people with Inclusion Body Myositis, increasing their risk of respiratory complications. Inspiratory muscle training, a technique which demonstrates efficacy and safety in improving respiratory function in people with neuromuscular disorders, has never been explored in those with Inclusion Body Myositis. In this pilot study, six adults with Inclusion Body Myositis (age range 53 to 81 years) completed eight weeks of inspiratory muscle training. Measures of respiratory function, quality of life, sleep quality and a two-minute walk test were performed pre and post-intervention. All participants improved their respiratory function, with maximal inspiratory pressure, sniff nasal inspiratory pressure and forced vital capacity increasing by an average of 50% (p = .002), 43% (p = .018) and 13% (p = .003) respectively. No significant change was observed in quality of life, sleep quality or two-minute walk test performance. No complications occurred due to inspiratory muscle training This pilot study provides the first evidence that inspiratory muscle training may be safe and effective in people with Inclusion Body Myositis, potentially mitigating the complications of poor respiratory function.

Keywords

Diaphragm function, Exercise therapy, Inclusion body myositis, Inspiratory muscle training

Link to Publisher Version (URL)

10.1016/j.nmd.2024.02.002

This document is currently not available here.

Find in your library

Share

COinS