“The breadth and depth of clinical knowledge and credibility the ORCS and OTS contribute distinguish our organization and help to make us leaders in lung health." George Habib President & CEO, Ontario Lung Association W I N T E R 2 0 0 8 Features In this Issue V O L U M E 2 4 , N U M B E R 1 Acute Exacerbations of COPD: Acute Exacerbations of COPD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 A Review of Medical Management and the Role of Pulmonary Rehabilitation Better Breathing 2008 Jocelyn Carr, PT, MSc, BScPT, Care Coordinator, West Park Healthcare Centre, Toronto Register today! . . . . . . . . . . . 3 The OLA: Where Lung Health is Going A message from George Habib, President & CEO . . . . . . . . . . 5 In the Spotlight Congratulations to Dr. Dina Brooks . . . . . . . . . . 5 Living with COPD: A Patient’s Perspective Brenda Cunningham shares her story . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Smoke-Free Ontario Important work continues . . . . 8 Posters for Better Breathing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Around the Regions . . . 10 Regular Columns Chair’s Message . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Editor’s Comment . . . . . . . . . . 2 Coming Events . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Respiratory Articles of Interest. . 7 www.on.lung.ca Background potential causes for illness.18 General Chronic obstructive pulmonary laboratory work is not recommended disease (COPD) is characterized by except for arterial blood gases19 which the presence of airflow obstruction due help determine the need for assisted to chronic bronchitis or emphysema.1,2 ventilation in patients presenting with In Canada, its estimated prevalence is low oxygen saturation.18,20 Sputum 5.7%.3 Among the five most common studies should be obtained in patients diseases, its morbidity and mortality with “very poor lung function, are the only ones that continue to rise4, frequent AEs or who have been on JOCELYN CARR and are expected to rise further. For antibiotics in the previous three these reasons, the importance of managing months” to optimize antibiotic treatment and COPD will increase. minimize drug resistance.18 Additionally, chest xThe natural course of COPD is that of rays are recommended for patients presenting repeated acute exacerbations (AEs) which are with severe AEs, to rule out other pathology, as defined as changes in purulence, viscosity or an estimated 16 to 21% of those arriving at acute volume of sputum production and/or an increase care settings have x-ray findings requiring in dyspnea5, and may be associated with other adjustments to treatment.20,21 As spirometry is symptoms such as increased cough or wheeze, difficult to obtain during AE, it is not for at least two consecutive days.6 The mean recommended for patients with known frequency of AEs in patients with severe COPD respiratory disease. Otherwise, spirometry may is one to four per year.6-8 Three to 16% require be indicated with full PFTs recommended once hospitalization6,9 and in severe AEs, mortality is the patient is stable.18,23 up to 10%.10,11 Although increased inflammatory activity and worsened airway obstruction are Medical Management of Acute found during AEs12, infections (viral, bacterial or a Exacerbations of COPD combination of the two) account for up to 80%.13-17 Medical approaches include pharmacological The recommended treatments are based on anti- treatment, oxygen therapy, non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NIPPV) and mechanical inflammatory and anti-microbial mechanisms. ventilation depending on the degree of symptom severity.18,23 Acute dyspnea requires inhaled Diagnosis of Acute Exacerbations of COPD Diagnosis of an AE is made using the history and bronchodilator treatment.18 Initially short-acting Continued on page 4 physical examination and must rule out other UPDATE An official publication of the Ontario Respiratory Care Society, a section of The Lung Association 573 King Street East Toronto, Ontario M5A 4L3 (416) 864-9911 Fax (416) 864-9916 E-mail: [email protected] Internet: http://www.on.lung.ca CO-EDITORS Dina Brooks, Ph.D., M.Sc., B.Sc.P.T. Libby Groff, RRT, B.H.A. CHAIR, ONTARIO RESPIRATORY CARE SOCIETY Julie Duff Cloutier, RN, BScN, MSc, CAE CHAIR, ONTARIO LUNG ASSOCIATION Jane Wallingford PRESIDENT & CEO, ONTARIO LUNG ASSOCIATION George Habib, BA, BEd, CAE DIRECTOR, ONTARIO RESPIRATORY CARE SOCIETY Sheila Gordon-Dillane, BA, MPA EDITORIAL BOARD Yvonne Drasovean, RRT Therese Hawn, B.Sc.P.T. Lawrence Jackson, B.Sc.Phm. Elizabeth McLaney, BA, B.H.Sc.(O.T.) Mika Nonoyama, RRT, Ph.D.(c) Dale Stedman, RN Rosalynn St. Germain, RRT Reny Vaughan, RRT Opinions expressed in Update do not necessarily represent the views of The Lung Association nor does publication of advertisements constitute official endorsement of products and services. The printing of this publication is sponsored by a generous unrestricted educational grant from Pfizer Canada. ONTARIO RESPIRATORY CARE SOCIETY Vision Improved lung health through excellence in interdisciplinary respiratory care. Mission Furthering excellence in the provision of interdisciplinary respiratory care through education, research, collaboration, provision of professional expertise and support for Lung Association efforts to improve lung health. 2 CHAIR’S MESSAGE etter Breathing 2008 will be soon upon us. The planning committee has worked very hard to ensure an energizing few days. This year’s conference will be once again held at Toronto Marriott Downtown Eaton Centre from January 31 to February 2, 2008. I hope you will take advantage of this spectacular conference. Be sure to register early! Take this opportunity to learn something new, meet new colleagues, and enjoy all the benefits of your ORCS membership! I would like to welcome George Habib as the new President and CEO of the Ontario Lung Association. The ORCS looks forward to working with Mr. Habib to advance the objectives of the ORCS and to continue to support the work of The Lung Association in such areas as patient and public education, advocacy and development. I would also like to express sincere appreciation on behalf of the ORCS to Cindy Shcherban, who served as B Interim President and CEO for much of 2007. The Provincial Committee welcomes Dilshad Moosa, the new GTR Representative, replacing Paula Cripps-McMartin, who has taken on the role of Greater Toronto Representative on the Membership and Program Promotion Committee. Thank you to Paula for her many contributions to the work of the Provincial Committee during the past several years. I urge you to get involved with the ORCS by joining one of our various committees or through attending educational events. Don’t forget to bring your colleagues and students along to introduce them to all the benefits of ORCS membership. For additional information, feel free to contact Sheila Gordon-Dillane (orcs@ on.lung.ca) or myself ([email protected]). See you at Better Breathing 2008! JULIE DUFF CLOUTIER, CHAIR, ORCS EDITOR’S COMMENT appy New Year! I am not sure where the fall went but it seemed to have been a flurry of new students, research grant applications and of course kids’ hockey games. The Editorial Board has worked on a new issue of Update. Jocelyn Carr has written a nice narrative summary on acute exacerbations in COPD, a topic of her M.Sc. thesis that was supported by an ORCS Fellowship Award. We also have the perspective of a patient with COPD by Brenda Cunningham of Sudbury, originally presented as a talk last April at the ORCS Northeastern H Ontario Region’s Sudbury seminar. Joanne Di Nardo, a staff member of the Ontario Lung Association, has written an update on Smoke-Free Ontario. We are also pleased to include some comments to ORCS members from Mr. George Habib, the new CEO of the Ontario Lung Association. We hope that you enjoy this issue and look forward to seeing you at the Better Breathing conference in Toronto. Thank you very much to Pfizer Canada for sponsoring the printing of this issue of Update. DINA BROOKS, CO-EDITOR Become an ORCS member or renew your membership for 2008-2009 Individual $40; Student $25; RHEIG add $15 Call (416) 864-9911 for information or visit www.on.lung.ca/orcs U PDATE W INTER 2008 BETTER BREATHING 2008: COMING LIFESTYLE AND THE LUNGS EVENTS Exhibits, networking, social events and more! egister today for The Lung Association’s annual conference, Better Breathing 2008, scheduled for January 31 - February 2, 2008 at the Toronto Marriott Downtown Eaton Centre hotel at 525 Bay St., Toronto. The ORCS program offers a wide range of topics of interest to people working in many respiratory care settings including acute, chronic and critical care in hospitals, rehabilitation, community care, public health and education. R Conference Highlights Thursday, January 31 (2 concurrent sessions) • ORCS Respiratory Health Educators Interest Group (RHEIG) annual session with a presentation on Ontario’s Chronic Disease Prevention and Management Framework and four workshops on Patient Education Resources for Asthma Education, Obesity and Lung Health, Using Evidence-Based Methods for Behavioural Modification in Practice and Rehabilitation Pre and Post Lung Transplantation • ORCS Critical Care Program – lectures on ICU Pharmacology: What’s New?, Update on Suctioning Guidelines for Adults and Treatment of Traumatic Lung Injury due to Burns, Smoke Inhalation and CO Poisoning • Reception and Workshop presented by AstraZeneca – Celebrating Asthma Educator Leadership: Taking the Asthma Circle of Care to the Community. Friday, February 1 • Plenary Session: Lifestyle and the Lungs - Dr. Andrew Pipe will discuss Smoking Cessation: What Every Health Professional Must Know and Dr. Robert Butcher will address Duty to Care: Limits and Responsibilities • ORCS and OTS joint scientific session, entitled What’s New in Lung Health featuring talks on Smoking and Screening: Are We Still in the 20th Century?, Asthma Management in the Emergency Department: The Ontario Experience and Long-term Sequelae of Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia • Friday afternoon ORCS sessions addressing Bronchial Thermoplasty: A Novel Treatment for Asthma, Guidelines for Home Oxygen Therapy and Effects of Air Pollution on Lung Health • A Meet and Mingle Reception for all delegates and exhibitor representatives featuring poster presentations, awards, recognition of long-term members, food stations, cash bar and entertainment. Saturday, February 2 • Concurrent workshops on research, rehabilitation, acute care and critical care topics • ORCS/OTS Luncheon with Dr. Shawn Aaron on Chronic Management of COPD, presented by Boehringer Ingelheim and Pfizer Canada. Thank you to our sponsors: Presenting Sponsor: GlaxoSmithKline, Platinum Sponsors: AstraZeneca, Novartis and Boehringer Ingelheim and Pfizer Canada, Bronze Sponsors: Nycomed and Professional Respiratory Home Care Services, and to our exhibitors. Please visit www.on.lung.ca/bb08 for the full program and on-line registration or call (416) 864-9911, ext. 256 for information. Register before January 21 to avoid the late fee. ORCS ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING February 1, 2008, 2:15 p.m., Grand Ballroom CD Toronto Marriott Downtown Eaton Centre Hotel Support The Lung Association’s Christmas Seal Campaign. www.on.lung.ca W INTER 2008 U PDATE January 31 – February 2, 2008* Better Breathing 2008, Lifestyle and the Lungs – Toronto Marriott Downtown Eaton Centre Hotel. See article for details. March 1, 2008 The IUATLD North American Region’s annual conference, Tuberculosis: A Disease Without Borders, will be held in San Diego, California. Visit www.bc.lung.ca. April 10, 2008* The ORCS, Eastern Ontario Region will hold a full day seminar at The Holiday Inn Kingston. Details to follow. May 16 – 21, 2008 The American Thoracic Society annual conference will be held in Toronto. Contact [email protected]. May 22 – 25, 2008 The Canadian Society of Respiratory Therapy National Conference and Trade Show will be held in Saskatoon. Visit www.csrt.ca. May 29 – June 1, 2008 The Canadian Physiotherapy Association’s National Congress 2008 will be held at the Westin Hotel Ottawa. Visit www.physiotherapy.ca. June 4, 2008 The ORCS, Southwestern Ontario Region will hold a full day seminar at the Best Western Lamplighter Inn, London. Details to follow. June 19 – 21, 2008 The 1st Canadian Respiratory Conference, A Breath of Fresh Air, will be held at the Hilton Bonaventure Hotel in Montréal, Québec. Visit www.lung.ca/crc. *For further information on upcoming ORCS programs, call (416) 864-9911, e-mail orcs@ on.lung.ca or visit the Events page on the web site at www.on.lung.ca/orcs. 3 Acute Exacerbations of COPD... Continued from page 1 beta-2 agonists and anti-cholinergics are recommended. Although no difference has been shown between using metered dose inhalers (MDIs) with a spacing device for inhaled medication and the nebulized form18, it is important to note that this evidence was collected on patients able to use MDIs effectively. Acutely dyspneic patients who cannot take, or hold, a deep breath may require nebulized treatments24 until breathing control is re-established. Oral methylxanthines should not be initiated but may be continued if a patient is already on this medication.18 Oral corticosteroids, targeting the inflammatory component, improve shortterm outcomes such as FEV1 and length of stay25-27, and reduce the risk of treatment failure by 10%.24 Due to potential sideeffects the course should be kept to between seven and 14 days18, as no further significant improvement occurs.25,26 Antibiotics are also indicated.18 Patients with more severe AEs derive more benefit5,19,28 and significantly lower treatment failure rates have been found with their use.29,30 Antibiotic treatment reduces the bacterial load and inflammatory response31, shortens AE duration32 and increases the time to the next AE.33 While the evidence supports antibiotic use, it is true that pathogens are becoming resistant, so despite the higher cost, it is recommended that newer antibiotics, such as fluoroquinolones, which have lower treatment failure rates34,35, be given to patients with more severe or more frequent AEs. A different class of antibiotic is recommended if a patient has received antibiotics in the previous three months.18 Purulent sputum appears to be highly predictive of positive bacterial culture with 84% of those with purulent sputum having positive cultures (compared to 38% of those with mucoid sputum).36 It has therefore been proposed that guidelines be altered to recommend antibiotics only be used in patients with purulent sputum.18 Hypoxemia during AEs can become lifethreatening. Treatment with oxygen therapy offsets pulmonary vasoconstriction, improves cardiac output and oxygenation to vital organs37 but can worsen hypercapnia.38-40 Because patients with hypercapnia are at the greatest risk for respiratory failure39, keeping the oxygen provided as low as possible, while maintaining a PaO2 of 60mmHg, is recommended.40 4 Studies have found NIPPV to be effective during AEs.41,42 It is less invasive than full mechanical ventilation and costeffective.43 Clinical improvement occurring within the first hour, reduced relative risks of treatment failure, mortality, intubation and complications, as well as a 3-day mean reduction in length of stay have been found.44 Thus, NIPPV should be considered for patients with respiratory failure. Those who do not improve within the first four hours may require full mechanical ventilation.45,46 If this occurs, the risks of morbidity and mortality increase.47 Prevention of future AEs, also part of medical management, involves smoking cessation, influenza vaccination, and effective action plans with education about the self-management of symptoms. Action plans are individually tailored plans for managing symptoms and comprise both pharmacological and non-pharmacological approaches.48 The physician must educate the patient and write specific medication plans. Other members of the healthcare team can provide education about identifying signs and symptoms of AEs and reinforcement of the physician’s instructions. Self-efficacy is an important factor that impacts on the self-management of AEs.49 To be effective patients must have confidence in their ability to cope.49 Disease specific self-management can lower hospital utilization and improve health status.50 The educational components of most PR programs are targeted at improving patients’ abilities to manage their disease, so PR should be considered important preventive care. Role of Pulmonary Rehabilitation after Acute Exacerbation Despite most AEs being managed in the community17, research has focused predominantly on hospital admissions, discharge planning, lengths of stay, survival, pharmaco-therapy, and the recovery of pulmonary function.25,26,51 Little attention has been paid to follow-up after acute illness or to non-pharmacological approaches that help regain exercise capacity and HRQL. The main objectives of PR after AE are to enhance HRQL, to treat muscle weakness and to improve functional exercise capacity, which are predictors of repeated AEs and mortality.52 A systematic review comparing the effects of PR with usual care after AE found a reduced risk for unplanned hospital admissions following PR with a consistently favourable effect on HRQL, significant benefits in exercise capacity and significantly decreased relative risks of death.52 While the number of patients was small, the effect of PR after AE appears to be larger than the effect of PR in stable COPD patients.52 In an RCT on subjects who had completed a PR program53, the yearly hospitalization and AE rates were significantly reduced in both groups in the 2-year period following an initial PR program. The group that received repeat-PR at 1-year had a further reduction in AEs.53 While a paucity of literature about AEs in those who have completed PR and about the effect of AEs on functional exercise capacity in individuals with COPD exists54,55, a recent study characterizes moderate and severe AEs in individuals with moderate or severe COPD who previously attended PR. Significantly lower functional exercise capacity and HRQL were found four weeks post-AE despite the majority of the group experiencing moderate (non-hospitalized) AEs and concluding that AEs have a larger impact than previously thought.55 The importance of PR is becoming more apparent and early referral must be considered for all those diagnosed with COPD. Its large educational component, targeting improved self-management, may reduce delays in seeking treatment for AEs, while the exercise training component, targeting improved functional exercise capacity, may decrease repeated hospital admissions, essentially reducing the overall impact of AEs. References 1. Celli B, MacNee W, Agusti A, Anzueto A, Berg B, Buist A et al. Standards for the diagnosis and treatment of patients with COPD: A summary of the ATS/ERS position paper. Eur Respir J 2004;23(6):932-946. 2. Morgan M, Calverley P, Clark C, Davidson A, Garrod R & Goldman J. BTS statement. Pulmonary rehabilitation. Thorax 2001;56:827-834. 3. Lacasse Y, Brooks D & Goldstein RS. Trends in the epidemiology of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in Canada, 1980-1995. Chest 1999;116:306-313. 4. Bernier M & Leonard B. Pulmonary rehabilitation after acute COPD exacerbation. Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America 2001;13(3):375-387. 5. Anthonisen NR, Manfreda J, Warren CP, Hershfield ES, Harding GKM, Nelson NA. Antibiotic therapy in exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Ann Intern Med Continued on page 11 U PDATE W INTER 2008 THE ONTARIO LUNG ASSOCIATION: Where Lung Health is Going George Habib, President & CEO The Lung Health Framework that demands more attention and resources. n the heels of our successful is another important initiative for We would like to see a COPD Strategy Holiday Ice campaign, I the Ontario Lung Association. In modeled after our successful Asthma thought I would quote Canadian February, I will join several Action program that incorporates a full hockey great Wayne Gretzky who ORCS members and other spectrum of care. We were pleased to be is known for saying, “I don’t representatives of the respiratory recently named the lead organization in a skate to where the puck is; I skate community at a forum to discuss new Emergency Department project to where it’s going.” As we see it, provincial lung health issues, charged to implement asthma treatment chronic and acute lung disease is building on the work of a national guidelines in hospitals across the province. becoming a bigger issue for GEORGE HABIB forum that was held last April. As well, we are committed to our tobacco individuals, our over-burdened healthcare industry and government. It is We look forward to sharing our provincial control programs and strive to keep air with this philosophy the Ontario Lung perspective with colleagues at the national quality top of mind as environmental issues continue to grab headlines and shape public Association welcomes 2008 and the level. Closer to home, we will continue to opinion. opportunities a new year and new advance our proposed COPD Strategy for I look forward to working with the perspective bring. At the time of printing I will have been Ontario which we submitted to the Ministry ORCS in the months ahead and will make in my position as President and CEO for a of Health and Long-Term Care in 2007. A every effort to meet members at the mere 15 weeks. However in this short time recent report on Smoking and COPD in upcoming Better Breathing Conference. I have had the pleasure of meeting many Canada released by the Canadian Lung Yours in health, ORCS members and am struck by Association confirms the increased risk and George Habib everyone’s willingness to get involved with prevalence of COPD, a leading health issue our mission and the shared passion we all have for improving lung health and respiratory care in Ontario. As a lung health organization, the Ontario Lung Association values our partnership with our two medical he Lung Association’s prestigious Meritorious Service societies, the Ontario Respiratory Care Award will be presented to Dr. Dina Brooks at Better Breathing 2008. Dina has served as a member or co-chair of Society and the Ontario Thoracic Society. the ORCS Editorial Board and a member of the Provincial The breadth and depth of clinical Committee since 1995 and has contributed greatly to ORCS knowledge and credibility you contribute programs, especially the Society’s publications. She has distinguish our organization and are one of arranged for numerous Update articles to be written and is a the reasons we are highly respected and skilful editor. Under her leadership, the Board initiated the sought after leaders in lung health. This Respiratory Articles of Interest and In the Spotlight columns. was recently evidenced in our ability to Dina was instrumental in the creation of the ORCS Research Update mobilize efficiently and take full advantage publication and its successor, the joint OTS/ORCS Research Review. She has of the public platform M.P.P. David been the Principal or Co-Investigator on many research grants funded by the Orazietti presented when he proposed Bill ORCS. Dina is an Associate Professor in the Department of Physical Therapy 11, the amendment to the Smoke-Free at the University of Toronto, a Research Associate at West Park Healthcare Ontario Act that would see legislation Centre and Co-Chair of the Canadian COPD Alliance. She is recognized extend to private vehicles to protect nationally and internationally as a leading researcher in the f ields of cardiochildren under the age of 16 from second- respiratory physiotherapy and COPD and was recently awarded a Canada hand smoke. We fully support this Research Chair in Rehabilitation in COPD. Dina has encouraged her students legislation and will further our efforts in the to study those areas and to join and volunteer for the ORCS and has also been next year to ensure that the Bill is accepted. involved in the development and evaluation of Lung Association patient Expect to hear from us on this issue as your education programs for individuals with COPD. We are pleased to put Dina continued support and participation are Brooks in the Spotlight to recognize her many contributions to respiratory care critical. and to the ORCS. O In the Spotlight: Dina Brooks T W INTER 2008 U PDATE 5 LIVING WITH COPD: A Patient’s Perspective Brenda Cunningham, TEAM COPD Ambassador, Sudbury and District From a talk presented at the ORCS, Northeastern Ontario Region Seminar, April 2007 s you know, COPD is devastating. You become visits, “Come on in Brenda, pull up a chair, let’s have a increasingly short of breath, suffer panic and smoke and discuss why you are so short of breath”, and anxiety, and stay at home because it is too much bother when it was time to leave he would say, “ You know if you to get dressed and go out. As a result, you become very, lost a few pounds it might help your shortness of breath”. very lonely and there are days when you want to just curl You will not see that happen in today’s society. I up in a ball and die. I have had many of those days since continued to smoke for almost 20 years. That and the fact I started down the road with COPD. that I was already predisposed to COPD is probably why COPD has been a big part of my life for over 34 years. the onset came at such an early age. My father was diagnosed with Emphysema in his early At 33, I was experiencing increased shortness of forties. In 1973 he was tested for the genetic disorder BRENDA CUNNINGHAM breath, some wheezing and a nagging little cough. I had Alpha-1 Antitrypsin Deficiency (A1AD). The result was positive: new family, of which one was a premature infant, who had been he was a FZ (a dysfunctional allele and a deficiency allele). So the born at only 25 weeks gestation and was now a very active 1 year process began and the family members who agreed to be tested got old, and a teenager about to start high school. We had only recently back their results. Can you believe it? I was the only one diagnosed moved to Sudbury. This increased my stress levels and difficulty in a ZZ (two deficiency alleles, associated with high risk for lung breathing. I was not fully at ease with my new physician, my damage). This meant that my mother also had to be a carrier of the condition was becoming more severe, as were my panic attacks, but Z gene. I received a letter telling me I had an extremely rare genetic I still had a young family to care for so I had to remain strong and disorder and should not smoke. What did that mean to me? could not put myself first. So for the most part I split my time Absolutely nothing, back then. I was young, invincible and very between home, the Memorial Hospital ER and a Family Doctor confident nothing would happen to me. with whom I had very little rapport. From 1973 to 1980 I watched a man I adored deteriorate before Fortunately for me a new young doctor was opening up a my eyes and finally succumb to the disease. He had smoked from practice and he accepted me as his patient. I trusted him the time he was 10 until just shortly before he passed away; he just immediately and luckily, he was familiar with COPD and AlAD. He couldn’t seem to stop. My father did not have access to the spent time with me during my panic attacks, my severe migraines, medications, information, professional expertise nor had he the but most importantly, he truly understood the effects this disease support system to allow him a good quality of life that today’s was having on me. He believed because of my family history of patients suffering from COPD have available. heart and lung disease that I needed a structured supervised For my Dad, life ended years before he died. He was devastated exercise program so he sent me to Cardiac Rehab. It was working when he was diagnosed. He lost his job or should I say jobs and I was more upbeat and had more energy. Because of financial because he maintained two for most of his life. He could no longer commitments however, I stopped to go to work outside the home. drink and most of his friends were either working buddies or Of course this only lasted a few years and with the breathlessness drinking buddies and when the going got tough they stopped increasing, I soon was forced to leave my job and was readmitted to showing up. He became despondent, angry, depressed, and as a the Cardiac program. I started developing a lot of headaches after the result the entire family was in turmoil. I watched my Dad as he exercise on a constant basis. So my doctor referred me to a passed through the stages all patients with a chronic illness do and Respirologist and Spirometry tests were ordered. I was diagnosed vowed it would never be that way with me. So easy to say when you with advanced COPD and put on medication. I finally quit smoking. are in your twenties and can still take a deep breath. Now I had to face it. I had COPD but I felt that if I didn’t say it As I look back at my childhood, little things pop to mind that out loud I could pretend that everything was okay. I bargained with should have put up a red flag for the medical profession, things that God to let me live until my boys were old enough to take care of should have indicated that something was wrong. When I had a themselves. For almost 10 years I kept up this pretence although chest cold, it lasted twice as long as my friends. I was bubbly and occasionally it would overwhelm me. Even though I had been bursting with energy but it fizzled out quicker than for my friends. previously diagnosed with A1AD and watched my father succumb I loved sports and participated in track events and often won, but to the disease as well as other family members suffer with chronic could not compete in the endurance events. This was blamed on my bronchitis, I still did not accept it. I was still in denial. I would never being slightly overweight. ask for help from anyone; in fact I often over exerted myself to I was raised on a farm so naturally I was surrounded by dust and prove I was still strong and healthy. I couldn’t ask for help from my allergens. Both my parents were heavy smokers so I was exposed to family because back when my father was alive, I had heard so many second-hand smoke from the day I was born. I myself picked up the times, “There is nothing wrong with Walter, he just needs to get off his habit at 15. By the time I was 25 and diagnosed A1AD, I was up to butt”. So I believed that this was how everyone was feeling about me. 1 l/2 to 2 packs a day. Those were not the cigarettes in the package At 45, I was put on Oxygen to be used upon exertion. This was but the good old kind you rolled yourself, and you smoked them till a wake up call; I cried for the better part of two days. My father they burned your lip. My family doctor would often say upon my Continued on page 7 A 6 U PDATE W INTER 2008 Living With COPD... Continued from page 6 only received oxygen a few months before he died and I knew I could no longer deny that I had COPD and thought that like my father I would be gone soon too. That was 13 years ago. I was then sent to Pulmonary Rehabilitation, which in the beginning I fought all the way. I now realize that this program can be the turning point for people with COPD. It certainly was for me. Did I get new lungs? …no I didn’t, but for the first time I really felt that I had a chance for a better quality of life. I was taught proper breathing techniques, correct ways to exercise, proper eating habits and symptom control. The social aspect is a very important benefit of Pulmonary Rehab. You get to mix with others who are like yourself, experience the same fears, rejection and feel as displaced as you do. I have been referred back to Pulmonary Rehab a few times in the last 12 years because I let my exercise schedule slip or I became ill and had to start building my endurance back up. I finally understand that I am the one that has to be in control of my condition. That is what can be achieved at Pulmonary Rehabilitation. We need to help this program expand because those with COPD for the most part do not get better and after we leave the initial program, there is no place to go. Karan Zalan, the head of our Pulmonary Rehab Centre, is the reason I am where I am today. I will never be able to thank her enough. It is not just me though - all the Rehab Grads feel that way. I have tried very hard to never allow myself the luxury of excessive self-pity but on occasion it rears its ugly head and people scatter. Like my dad, I too have spent many years full of anger, resentment, fear and even hate on an occasion or two for those able to do the things I cannot. After almost 13 years of this nose hose, I still hate it. It makes me stand out and be different but I realize that it will allow me to have a longer life to enjoy and that certainly is a fair trade for a little vanity. I try to maintain a positive attitude; I keep informed about the new medications and equipment to ease the condition. Yes, COPD does make you different. It is a disease that requires a “forced lifestyle change” you must maintain forever, but you can do it and live a full and happy life. It has been a very long and winding road but at 58 I can finally say I am in control of my condition. New patients will always be devastated when they are first diagnosed, angry that it has happened to them, depressed as they have to leave jobs they love or are left behind by family and friends and they will be lonely…It is a very, very cold, dark place sometimes. I have a positive attitude, and I have a mission: Raising Awareness of COPD and helping others over the bumpy journey they will experience with COPD. To help accomplish this I have joined an organization called TEAM COPD whose goal is to raise awareness of COPD at the grassroots level. I finally have started putting Brenda first. I have taken the time to have coffee with the Rehab Grads and we have formed a new Lung Disease Support Group. This Support Group is very badly needed and we are receiving more response than we could ever have hoped for. In conclusion I would like to sum it up this way. My boys have grown up, I am happy and content with my new purpose in life and I no longer live in the past. I do not concentrate on what I don’t have but on what I do have. You might say - My life is just beginning. W INTER 2008 U PDATE RESPIRATORY ARTICLES OF INTEREST Nonoyama ML, Brooks D, Guyatt GH, Goldstein RS. Effect of Oxygen on Health Quality of Life in COPD Patients with Transient Exertional Hypoxemia. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2007; 176: 343-349. Ambulatory oxygen improves acute exercise performance in people with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) but may not reflect how they respond symptomatically in their daily lives. Justifying long-term ambulatory oxygen requires study of the individual patient experience. In this study, Mika Nonoyama undertook a series of individual randomized controlled trials (N-of1 RCTs) to measure the effect of oxygen on patients with COPD who do not meet criteria for mortality reduction with long-term oxygen therapy. Twenty-seven patients completed double-blind Nof-1 RCTs, each comprising 3 pairs of 2-week home treatment periods, with oxygen provided during one period of each pair and a placebo mixture during the other. Outcome measures included Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire (CRQ), St. George’s Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) and 5 minute walk test (5MWT). Among the whole group, there were no statistical or clinical differences between oxygen and placebo for the CRQ or for the SGRQ. The findings do not support the general application of long-term ambulatory oxygen therapy for patients with COPD who do not meet criteria for mortality reduction with long-term oxygen therapy. O’Donnell DE, Aaron S, Bourbeau J, Hernandez P, et al. Canadian Thoracic Society Recommendations for management of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease - 2007 update. Can Respir J 2007; 14 (Suppl B): 5B-32B If you work in the area of COPD, these new practice guidelines, which reflect a rigorous analysis of the recent literature, are a “must-read”. As you may know, the Canadian Thoracic Society published management recommendations in 2003. Since then, extensive scientific information has emerged. The “COPD Recommendations – 2007 Update” presents this new evidence and the implications to optimal management of individuals with COPD. Some of the updated information includes: 1) new epidemiological information on mortality and prevalence of COPD; 2) co-morbidities in COPD; 3) discussion of acute exacerbation; and 4) a detailed discussion of clinical assessment. The section on management of COPD focuses on education, smoking cessation (including a detailed table of pharmacological aids in smoking cessation), pharmacotherapy, oxygen therapy, pulmonary rehabilitation, surgery and non-invasive ventilation. There are also recommendations for end-of-life issues in COPD. Case scenarios are used to demonstrate important aspects of assessment and therapy. For information on the CTS COPD Guidelines Dissemination and Implementation Committee, you can visit their website at www.COPDguidelines.ca. Compiled by Dina Brooks. 7 With Smoke-Free Ontario Done, More is to Come Joanne Di Nardo, MA, Manager, Community Tobacco Control Initiatives, The Lung Association “I live in an apartment with a child with asthma and my The Story neighbours smoke. The smoke smell in my unit is very Once upon a time an ambitious newcomer entered the bad and makes it difficult for my child to breathe. What gates of The Lung Association’s provincial office. This can I do?” newcomer had always been very health conscious, eating This type of call/e-mail is one of the most common I well, exercising, drinking very little alcohol and never receive. In 2006, the Ontario Tobacco-free Network smoking a day in her life. Unbeknownst to her, this (OTN) commissioned two polls from Ipsos Reid newcomer was going to be charged with helping to rid regarding the issue of second-hand smoke in multi-unit the Ontario of a great evil – commercial tobacco. This dwellings. The results showed that a majority, 64% of evil was allowed to propagate unchecked, leaving illness JOANNE DI NARDO Ontarians living in multi-unit dwellings, if given a and death behind. This is where the story begins, the story about ‘the legislation that could’, the Smoke-Free Ontario Act choice, would choose to live in a smoke-free building. Based on these results, the OTN launched a campaign in March 2007 to help (SFOA). In Ontario, the SFOA came into effect on May 31, 2006 to fight educate property managers, tenants and condominium owners that the evils of tobacco. Many helped celebrate its inception, looking deeming a property smoke-free is not illegal, although it may be forward to a decline in the 16 000 Ontarians that die from tobacco difficult to enforce, but is worth adopting as a voluntary measure use each year. This legislation protects workers and the general for the sake of health, safety and just plain economics. public by requiring all workplaces and public places to be 100% “I see children across the street from my house selling illegal smoke-free. cigarettes, we should really check what’s in them.” By far, one of the hottest tobacco control topics around the federal Tobacco is done The Smoke-Free Ontario Act brought with it a new consciousness – and provincial legislatures is contraband. The tobacco industry, the health and the protection of children from this very well researched, convenience store associations and the Ontario Tobacco Research dangerous but legal product. Many believed that the Smoke-Free Unit (OTRU) all agree that there is a lot of contraband product Ontario Act had solved the problem; the tobacco issue was done. I available and it is a problem that needs to be controlled. Several can even say that I began to think about what my new mission Federal health agencies have recently endorsed a letter produced by would be, but then the phone started ringing, ringing and ringing: the Canadian Coalition Against Tobacco (CCAT), urging the “Can you help me quit smoking?” “I live in an apartment with government to develop a plan to control the problem at its many a child with asthma and my neighbours smoke. The smoke smell in sources, including First Nations. It is important to control this my unit is very bad and makes it difficult for my child to breathe. problem in order to protect our children from becoming the next What can I do?” “I see children across the street from my house generation of smokers simply because they can easily access this selling illegal cigarettes, we should really check what’s in them.” very affordable black market product. “I am a smoker, but I would never smoke in my car with my child, heck, “I’m a smoker, but I would never smoke in my car with my child, I don’t even smoke in my car because I know the smell lingers.” I realized that my job was far from slowing down; instead, it was heck, I don’t even smoke in my car, period, because I know the the beginning of a new era in tobacco control - implementing the smell lingers.” SFOA. One by one, I responded to the questions and comments I The Governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger recently said, “Hasta La Vista, baby” to the silent suffocation of children received. travelling in private vehicles. In November 2007, the Town of Wolfville, Nova Scotia became the first municipality in Canada to “Can you help me quit smoking?” It turns out this person was not looking to quit cold turkey. He had implement a ban on smoking in vehicles carrying children. More heard about free nicotine replacement announced by the recently, the government of Nova Scotia adopted as its own, an government of Ontario, administered by the Centre for Addiction opposition Private Member’s Bill that would ban smoking in and Mental Health (CAMH) through a program called the “Stop vehicles carrying children under the age of 19. Once the Bill has Study”. The products offered by the Stop Study were nicotine gum, received Royal Assent on Friday, December 14, 2007, it will make patch and inhaler. For some, more was needed than the free Nova Scotia the first Canadian province to ban smoking in vehicles products being offered. A pill, bupropion, had been available for carrying children. Here in Ontario, the OTN commissioned an Ipsos Reid poll to several years and in 2007, a new product, varenicline, also a pillformat smoking cessation aid, was introduced with many successes gauge public support if legislation were introduced banning reported (e.g., the Cochrane Review, Jan 2007). These drugs smoking in cars carrying children under the age of 16. The results provide additional smoking cessation options. Continued on page 9 8 U PDATE W INTER 2008 Poster Abstract Submissions for Better Breathing 2008 1. In COPD patients, changing the track layout used for a 6-min walk test (6MWT) from straight to circular has only a modest effect on 6min walk distance (6MWD) K Hill1,2, V Bansal1, T Dolmage1, L Woon1,3, R Goldstein1,2,4, D Brooks1,2. 1 Respiratory Medicine, West Park Healthcare Centre, Toronto, 2Dept of Physical Therapy, University of Toronto, Toronto, 3Physiotherapy Dept, West Park Healthcare Centre, Toronto 10. Ambulatory Gas Usage in Patients with COPD and Exertional Hypoxemia Mika Laura Nonoyama, D Brooks, GH Guyatt, RS Goldstein, West Park Healthcare Centre, Toronto 2. Individualized Pulmonary Rehabilitation after Moderate or Severe Exacerbation in Individuals with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease; A Pilot Study Jocelyn Carr, Roger Goldstein and Dina Brooks, West Park Healthcare Centre, Toronto 12. Communication and Practice Regarding Ventilation for Individuals with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) Renata Vaughan, Hamilton Health Sciences Centre, Hamilton 3. Current Mobilization Practices with Patients with Indwelling Femoral Lines (IFL) within University Health Network (UHN) Nathalie Cote, Audrey Chen, Claire Hoy, Krista McIntyre, Michael O’Brien, Carol Heck, University Health Network, Toronto 4. Practice Patterns of Physical Therapists in the Management of Patients Hospitalized with an Acute Exacerbation of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Leslie Harth, Jennifer Stuart, Catherine Montgomery, Karol Pintier, Susan Czyzo, Dept of Physical Therapy, University of Toronto, Toronto 5. Current Mobilization Practices of Ontario Physiotherapists in Patients with Indwelling Femoral Lines (IFL) Therese Hawn, Nathalie Cote, Amanda Fenton, Vicky Quan, Carol Heck, Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network, Toronto 6. Estimating maximum work rate during incremental cycle ergometry testing from six-minute walk distance in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Kylie Hill1,2,3, Sue Jenkins2,3,4, Danielle Philippe1, Nola Cecins2,3,4, David Hillman1, Peter Eastwood1,3,5 Departments of 1Pulmonary Physiology and 2Physiotherapy, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital, 3School of Physiotherapy, Curtin University of Australia, 4Lung Institute of Western Australia, and 5School of Anatomy and Human Biology, University of Western Australia, Australia 7. Systematic Review of Arm Training in Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Tania Janaudis-Ferreira1,2, Kylie Hill1,3, Roger Goldstein1, Karin Waddell2, Dina Brooks1,3, 1Respiratory Medicine, West Park Healthcare Centre and 2 Department of Community Medicine and Rehabilitation, Umea University, Sweden, 3Department of Physical Therapy, University of Toronto 8. A Retrospective Review of Discharge Medications on Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease within A Group of Four Community Hospitals with a Proposed Strategy Lucinda Kwan, DJ Thompson, Jennifer Chien, Huron Perth Healthcare Alliance, Stratford 9.Asthma Electronic Record for Primary Care: Development and Pilot Testing J.P. Minard, Queen’s University, Kingston, N. Garvey, Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care, Toronto, T.W. Sands, University of Windsor, J. Belanger, Group Health Centre, Sault Ste. Marie and M.D. Lougheed, Queen’s University, Kingston W INTER 2008 U PDATE 11.Activation:A Unique Program for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Angela Shaw, Terry Boshart, Suzy Young, St Mary’s General Hospital, Kitchener 13. The Sensewear Armband underestimates measurements of energy expenditure during activities of daily living in patients with COPD Kylie Hill1,2, Lynda Woon1,3, Tom Dolmage1, Roger Goldstein1,2,4, Dina Brooks1,2 1 Resp Med, West Park Healthcare Centre, 2Dept of Physical Therapy, University of Toronto, 3Physiotherapy Dept, West Park Healthcare Centre, 4 Dept of Medicine, University of Toronto 14. COPD Exacerbation Presentation and Treatment in a Community Hospital in Ontario: 6 Months of Data Suzy Young, St Mary’s General Hospital, Kitchener Smoke-Free Ontario... Continued from page 8 of the poll were released on Thursday, December 6, 2007, reporting that 86% of non-smokers and 66% of smokers support smoke-free car legislation that would protect children under the age of 16. That same day, Thursday, December 6th, Sault Ste. Marie MPP, David Orazietti, introduced Bill 11, the Protecting Children and Youth from Second Hand Smoke in Automobiles Act. This Bill, if passed, would give law enforcement officers the authority to pull over and fine anyone smoking in a private vehicle when passengers under the age of 16 are present. The Lung Association and the OTN plan to educate MPPs about the importance of passing Bill 11 during National Non-Smoking Week, January 20-26, 2008. Conclusion There you have it. This ambitious newcomer has become somewhat more comfortable in the ever-changing world of tobacco-control by contributing to the implementation of the SFOA and addressing the many questions surrounding its implementation. What I have learned so far is that it is important to stay one step ahead of the tobacco companies, because when we think that tobacco is done, the tobacco companies find new ways to market tobacco and keep their business profitable. At the OTN, we count on our local tobacco-free coalitions/ councils to help us understand the pulse of each community so that we can better plan our next campaign, research policy initiatives and provide financial support to councils. I commend all those who have participated in making Ontario smoke-free. My work this year is not only in leading the campaigns to eradicate secondhand smoke in multi-unit dwellings and in cars, it is to find ways to keep our local tobacco-free coalitions active, engaged and empowered. If you know of someone interested in pursuing tobacco control advocacy initiatives, please encourage them to contact me about joining a local tobacco-free coalition at [email protected]. For now, Hasta La Vista, baby! 9 Around the Regions: ORCS Educational Opportunities for You and Your Colleagues ll members of the ORCS who live in Ontario belong to one of seven regional groups. Each group has a regional representative who sits on the ORCS Provincial Committee. Through volunteer planning committees, usually chaired by the regional representative and supported by the ORCS staff, regional groups present one or more education programs in their region each year. Members and non-members are welcome to attend. ORCS members pay a reduced fee for all programs. Those paying the nonmember fee receive a trial membership for the balance of the membership year (April 1 – March 31). In 2008, take advantage of a program in your own region or another part of the province. A Northwestern Ontario Region – Regional Representative: Shelley Prevost, RRT The Northwestern Ontario Region was established in 2006 and is based in Thunder Bay. The group held an evening program in late September of 2007 and is planning a seminar in the early fall of 2008, either as an educational evening session or a full day program. Northeastern Ontario Region – Regional Representative: Christina McMillan Boyles, RN, MScN The Northeastern Ontario Region is based in Sudbury, where the group offers a full day seminar every two years and educational evenings in alternate years. A full day seminar, The Air We Breathe and Lung Health, was held on April 24, 2007 and is planning an educational evening seminar in the early fall of 2008. Essex/Kent Region – Regional Representative: Gillian Hueniken, Reg. PT The Essex/Kent Region includes Chatham-Kent, the City of Windsor and Essex County. Programs are held in Chatham and Windsor. In 2007, the group held a full day seminar, Respiratory Health for All Ages: What inspiring minds want to know in Windsor. An educational evening will be held in Chatham in the fall of 2008. Thank you to our 2007 ORCS member volunteers! hank you to the many ORCS members who volunteered for the ORCS during 2007. Members served on our committees, organized education programs, wrote articles for our publications, reviewed research grants, engaged in advocacy activities, spoke at ORCS seminars and Lung Association patient education forums, participated in fundraising events and helped us achieve our goals in these and many other ways. We appreciate your efforts! Make volunteering for the ORCS part of your lifestyle in 2008! Contact [email protected]. T 10 Southwestern Ontario Region – Regional Representative: Justyna Couto, BScPT The Southwestern Ontario Region is based in London. In addition to offering full day seminars there, the group has also presented educational evenings in London, Sarnia and St. Thomas. A full day program, Spring Inspirations, was held in London in June of 2007. In 2008, a full day program will be held on June 4 in London and an educational evening will be offered in Sarnia in the fall. South Central Ontario Region – Regional Representative: Sheila Dedman, BSc, BHScPT The South Central Ontario Region has several large centres including Hamilton, St. Catharines, Niagara Falls, KitchenerWaterloo, Guelph, Burlington and Brantford so programs rotate among various locations from year to year. A full day seminar is held in October each year and occasional educational evenings are offered. In 2007, the group held a full day program, A Fall Harvest of Respiratory Care in Cambridge. In 2008, a full day program will be planned for the Niagara area and an educational evening may be held in the Hamilton area in the spring. Greater Toronto Region – Chair: Dianne Naiman, RRT, Provincial Representative: Dilshad Moosa, RRT, CRE, Education Chair: Ana MacPherson, RRT, MSc, CRE The Greater Toronto Region has a more formal structure than the other groups with an Executive Committee elected annually. One member of the Executive Committee is appointed to the Provincial Committee. Another member chairs the group’s Education Committee. The group offers educational evenings in April and June (the latter session includes the group’s annual meeting) and a full day seminar in November. In 2007, evening sessions were held in Newmarket and Toronto. The Region’s annual full day seminar, How Does Your Breathing Measure Up? was held on November 1, 2007 in Markham. Plans will be made in January for spring evening programs and the 2008 fall seminar. Eastern Ontario Region – Regional Representative: Jennifer Olajos-Clow, RN, MSc, APN, CAE The Eastern Ontario Region presents full day programs in Ottawa and Kingston and has also held educational evenings in Cornwall, Brockville and Perth. In 2007, educational evenings were held in Ottawa in March and Kingston in late November. Plans for 2008 are for a full day seminar in Kingston on April 10. With Appreciation! ORCS education programs would not be possible without the strong support of the many ORCS members who volunteer to serve on our planning committees, speakers (including many ORCS and Ontario Thoracic Society members) who volunteer their time and expertise to present at our programs and many pharmaceutical, home oxygen and medical equipment companies that provide financial support through exhibit fees and sponsorship contributions for the seminars. U PDATE W INTER 2008 Acute Exacerbations of COPD... Continued from page 4 1987;106:196-220. 6. Seemungal TAR, Donaldson GC, Bhowmik A, Jeffries DJ & Wedzicha JA. Time course and recovery of exacerbations in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2000;161:1608-1613. 7. Burge P, Calverley P, Jones P, Spencer S, Anderson J & Maslen T. Randomised, double blind, placebo controlled study of fluticasone propionate in patients with moderate to severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: The ISOLDE trial. 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Smoking and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Clin Chest Med 2000;21(1):67-86. 14. Sethi S & Murphy T. Bacterial infection in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in 2000: A state of the art review. Clin Microbiol Rev 2001;14:336-363. 15. Seemungal TAR, Harper-Owen R, Bhowmik A, Moric I, Sanderson G, Message S et al. Respiratory viruses, symptoms, and inflammatory markers in acute exacerbations and stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 2001;164:1618-1623. 16. Sethi S, Evans N, Grant B & Murphy T. New strains of bacteria and exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. N Engl J Med 2002;347:465-471. 17. Wedzicha JA. Exacerbations: Etiology and pathophysiologic mechanisms. Chest 2002;121:136S-141S. 18. O’Donnell DE, Aaron S, Bourbeau J, Hernandez P, Marciniuk D, Balter M et al. Canadian Thoracic Society recommendations for management of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease - 2003. Can Respir J 2003;10(Suppl A):11A-65A. 19. McCrory D, Brown C, Gelfand S & Bach P. Management of acute exacerbations of COPD: A summary and appraisal of the published evidence. Chest 2001;55:566-573. 20. Bourbeau J, Nault D & Borycki E. Comprehensive management of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Hamilton London: BC Decker Inc. 2002. 21. Sherman S, Skoney J & Ravikrishnan K. Routine chest radiographs in exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Diagnostic value. Arch Intern Med 1989;149:2493-2496. 22. Wolkove N, Dajczman E, Colacone A & Kreisman H. The relationship between pulmonary function and dyspnea in obstructive lung disease. Chest 1989;96:1247-1251. 23. Balter M, La Forge J, Low D, Mandell L & Grossman R. Canadian guidelines for the management of acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis. Can Respir J 2003;10 (Suppl B):3B-32B. 24. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Management of acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Summary (Publication no. AHRQ Publication No. 00E020) 2000. Retrieved March 9, 2003, from AHRQ: http://www.ahrq.gov/clinic/epcsums/copdsum.htm 25. Niewoehner D, Erbland M, Deupree R, Collins D, Gross N, Light R et al. Effect of systemic glucocorticoids on exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. N Eng J Med 1999;340(25):1941-1947. 26. Davies L, Angus R & Calverley P. Oral corticosteroids in patients admitted to hospital with exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A prospective randomized controlled trial. Lancet 1999;354:456-460. 27. Thompson W, Nielson C, Carvalho P, Charan N & Crowley J. Controlled trial of oral prednisone in outpatients with acute COPD exacerbation. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 1996;154(2):407-412. W INTER 2008 U PDATE 28. Saint S, Bent S, Vittinghoff E & Grady D. Antibiotics in acute bronchitis: A meta-analysis. Am J Med 1995;107(1):62-67. 29. Adams S, Melo J, Luther M & Anzueto A. Antibiotics are associated with lower relapse rates in outpatients with acute exacerbations of COPD. Chest 2000;117: 1345-1352. 30. Destache C, Dewan N, O'Donohue W, Campbell J & Angelillo V. Clinical and economic considerations in the treatment of acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis. J Antimicrob Chemother 1999;43:A107-A113. 31. Wilson R & Grossman R. Introduction: the role of bacterial infection in chronic bronchitis. Semin Respir Infect 2000;15(1):1-6. 32. Murphy T, Sethi S & Niederman M. The role of bacteria in exacerbations of COPD. A constructive view. Chest 2000;118:204-209. 33. Grossman R, Mukherjee J, Vaughan D, Eastwood C, Cook R, Laforge J et al. A 1-year community-based health economic study of ciprofloxacin vs usual antibiotic treatment in acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis: the Canadian Ciprofloxacin Health Economic Study Group. Chest 1998;113:131-141. 34. Wilson R, Kubin R, Ballin I, Deppermann K-M, Bassaris H, Leophonte P et al. Five-day moxifloxacin therapy compared with 7-day clarithromycin therapy for the treatment of acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis. Antimicrob Chemother 1999;44:501-513. 35. Wilson R, Schentag J, Ball P & Mandell L. A comparison of gemifloxacin and clarithromycin in acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis and long-term clinical outcomes. Clin Ther 2002;24:639-652. 36. Stockley R, O'Brien C, Pye A & Hill S. Relationship of sputum colour to nature and outpatient management of acute exacerbations of COPD. Chest 2000;117:1638-1645. 37. Palm K & Decker W. Acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Emerg Med Clin N Am 2003;21:331-352. 38. Stubbing D, Beaupre A & Vaughan R. Long-term oxygen treatment. In: Hamilton London: BC Decker Inc. 2002:109-130. 39. Bone R, Pierce A & Johnson RJ. Controlled oxygen administration in acute respiratory failure in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: A reappraisal. Am J Med 1978;65:896-902. 40. Eldridge F & Gherman C. Studies in oxygen administration in respiratory failure. Ann Intern Med 1968;68:569-578. 41. Bott J, Carroll N, Conway J, Keilty S, Ward E, Brown A et al. Randomised controlled trial of nasal ventilation in acute ventilatory failure due to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Lancet 1993;341:1555-1557. 42. Servillo G, Ughi L, Rossano F & Leone D. Noninvasive mask pressure support ventilation in COPD patients. Intensive Care Med 1994;50:S54. 43. Keenan S, Gregor J, Sibbald W, Cook D & Gafni A. Noninvasive positive pressure ventilation in the setting of severe, acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: more effective and less expensive. Crit Care Med 2000;28:2094-2102. 44. Lightowler J, Wedzicha J, Ellliott M & Ram F. Noninvasive positive pressure ventilation to treat respiratory failure resulting from exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: Cochrane systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ 2003;326:185-187. 45. Plant P, Owen J & Elliott M. Non-invasive ventilation in acute exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: Long term survival and predictors of in-hospital outcome. Lancet 2001;56:708-712. 46. Soo Hoo G, Santiago S & Williams A. Nasal mechanical ventilation for hypercapnic respiratory failure in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: Determinants of success and failure. Crit Care Med 1994;22:1253-1261. 47. Soto F & Varkey B. Evidence-based approach to acute exacerbations of COPD. Curr Opin Pulm Med 2003;9(2):117-124. 48. Watson P, Town G, Holbrook N, Dwan C, Toop L & Drennan C. Evaluation of a self-management plan for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Eur Respir J 1997;10:1267-1271. 49. Bandura A & Adams N. Analysis of the self-efficacy theory of behavioural change. Cogn Ther Res 1977;1:287-308. 50. Bourbeau J, Julien M, Maltais F, Rouleau M, Beaupre A & Begin R. A disease specific self-management intervention reduces hospital use in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Arch Intern Med 2003;163:585-591. 51. Stanbrook M, Goldstein, RS. Steroids for acute exacerbations of COPD. How long is enough? Chest 2001;119(3):675-676. 52. Puhan M, Scharplatz M, Troosters T & Steurer J. Respiratory rehabilitation after acute exacerbation of COPD may reduce risk for readmission and mortality - A systematic review [Electronic Version]. Respiratory Research 2005;6. Retrieved 10 October 2006 from http://respiratoryresearch.com/content/6/1/54 53. Foglio K, Bianchi L & Ambrosino N. Is it really useful to repeat outpatient pulmonary rehabilitation programs in patients with chronic airway obstruction? A two-year controlled study. Chest 2001;119:1696-1704. 54. Emtner MI, Arnardottir HR, Hallin R, Lindberg E & Janson C. Walking distance is a predictor of exacerbations in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease [Electronic Version]. Respiratory Medicine 2006. Retrieved December 15, 2006 from http://www.sciencedirect.com/ science?_ob=ArticleURL&_aset=V-WA-A-W-BV-MsSW. 55. Carr SJ, Goldstein RS & Brooks D. Acute exacerbations of COPD in subjects completing pulmonary rehabilitation. Chest 2007;132:127-134. ORCS Membership ORCS membership is open to health care professionals and students in many disciplines including nursing, respiratory therapy, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, pharmacy, pulmonary function technology, social work and nutrition. The membership fee for April 1, 2008 to March 31, 2009 is $40. The student fee is $25. Members wishing to join the ORCS Respiratory Health Educators Interest Group, add $15. Please complete the form below and send it by fax with a credit card number or by mail with your cheque to the Ontario Respiratory Care Society, 573 King St. E., Toronto, ON, M5A 4L3. 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