Dyspnea induced by inspiratory loading limits dual-tasking in healthy young adults

Author:

Chauvin Stephanie R.ORCID,Otoo-Appiah JessicaORCID,Zheng Anna,Ibrahim Chris H.,Ma James E.,Rozenberg DmitryORCID,Reid W. DarleneORCID

Abstract

Objectives Dyspnea is a common and multidimensional experience of healthy adults and those with respiratory disorders. Due to its neural processing, it may limit or interfere with cognition, which may be examined with a dual-task paradigm. The aim of this study was to compare single-task performance of Stroop Colour and Word Test (SCWT) or inspiratory threshold loading (ITL) to their combined dual-task performance. Secondly, whether mood was related to dyspnea or cognitive performance was also evaluated. Materials & methods A virtual pre-post design examined single (SCWT and ITL) and dual-task (SCWT+ITL) performance. For ITL, a Threshold Trainer™ was used to elicit a “somewhat severe” rating of dyspnea. The SCWT required participants to indicate whether a colour-word was congruent or incongruent with its semantic meaning. The Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-21 (DASS-21) was completed to assess mood. Breathing frequency, Borg dyspnea rating, and breathing endurance time were ascertained. Results Thirty young healthy adults (15F, 15M; median age = 24, IQR [23–26] years) completed the study. SCWT+ITL had lower SCWT accuracy compared to SCWT alone (98.6%, [97.1–100.0] vs 99.5%, [98.6–100.0]; p = 0.009). Endurance time was not different between ITL and SCWT+ITL (14.5 minutes, [6.9–15.0]) vs 13.7 minutes, [6.1–15.0]; p = 0.59). DASS-21 scores positively correlated with dyspnea scores during ITL (rho = 0.583, p<0.001) and SCWT+ITL (rho = 0.592, p<0.001). Conclusions ITL significantly reduced dual-task performance in healthy young adults. Lower mood was associated with greater perceived dyspnea during single and dual-task ITL. Considering the prevalence of dyspnea in respiratory disorders, the findings of this dual task paradigm warrant further exploration to inform dyspnea management during daily activities.

Funder

Canadian Institute of Health Research Operating Grant

Sandra Faire and Ivan Fecan Professorship in Rehabilitation Medicine

Department of Physical Therapy, University of Toronto

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference69 articles.

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