加勒比海岛屿三级医疗诊所慢性阻塞性肺病的描述性研究

IF 0.2 4区 医学 Q4 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL West Indian Medical Journal Pub Date : 2018-12-30 DOI:10.7727/wimj.2018.125
S. Mohammed, H. Mohammed, S. Sakhamuri, A. Bhowmik, T. Seemungal
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:确定西印度受试者慢性阻塞性肺病(COPD)的严重程度与生活质量之间的关系,以及COPD与抑郁症状的相关性。方法:这是一项横断面、观察性研究,对三级护理的门诊COPD患者进行研究。COPD的严重程度由全球慢性阻塞性肺病倡议(GOLD)阶段、GOLD组、体重指数、气流阻塞、呼吸困难和运动能力(BODE)指数确定。生活质量通过圣乔治呼吸问卷(SGRQ)和COPD评估测试(CAT)进行评估,抑郁症通过流行病学研究中心抑郁量表(CES-D)进行评估。结果:共招募了105名患者(85.7%为男性,37.1%为印度-特里尼达人,42.9%为非洲-特里尼达人,64.8%为小学教育程度),平均年龄为66.9岁(标准差:9.60岁)。中位体重指数为25 kg/m2;26.7%体重不足。确定的风险因素为:曾经吸烟(27.6%)、大麻(20%)、生物量(81.9%)、被动吸烟(70.5%)、职业暴露(80%)。25%的患者CES-D≥16。合并症包括糖尿病(22%)、高血压(29%)、胃食管反流病(10%)和既往心肌梗死(15%)。共有59%的患者报告家庭月收入低于800美元。受教育程度越低,SGRQ(总分和影响)越差,1秒用力呼气量越低,改良医学研究委员会量表(mMRC)≥2,BODE指数越高。GOLD组越高,SGRQ、CAT和CES-D越差。较高的CES-D与更短的6分钟步行距离、较差的SGRQ、CAT和mMRC评分、较高的GOLD组和每年增加的COPD入院人数有关。CES-D≥16的患者步行距离较短。较高的BODE四分位数与较差的SGRQ、CAT和CES-D评分相关。结论:GOLD组和BODE四分位数越高,生活质量评分越差,抑郁评分越高。高GOLD组的患者应进行抑郁症筛查。COPD的教育应该针对那些社会经济地位较低的人。
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A Descriptive Study of Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease in Tertiary Care Clinics of a Caribbean Island
Objective: To determine the relationship between severity of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and quality of life as well as COPD’s correlation with depressive symptoms in West Indian subjects. Methods: This is a cross-sectional, observational study of outpatients with COPD in tertiary care. The severity of COPD was determined by the Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) stage, GOLD group, and body mass index, airflow obstruction, dyspnoea and exercise capacity (BODE) index. Quality of life was assessed by the St George Respiratory Questionnaire (SGRQ) and COPD Assessment Test (CAT), and depression was assessed by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). Results: A total of 105 patients (85.7% male, 37.1% Indo-Trinidadian, 42.9% Afro-Trinidadian, 64.8% primary level education) were recruited with a mean age of 66.9 years (standard deviation: 9.60 years). The median body mass index was 25 kg/m2; 26.7% were underweight. Risk factors identified were: ever-smokers (27.6%), marijuana (20%), biomass (81.9%), passive smoke (70.5%), occupational exposures (80%). The CES-D of 25% of the patients was ≥ 16. Co-morbidities included diabetes (22%), hypertension (29%), gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (10%) and previous myocardial infarction (15%). A total of 59% of the patients reported a monthly household income of less than US$800. Lower level of education was associated with worse SGRQ (total and impact), lower forced expiratory volume in one second, modified Medical Research Council scale (mMRC) of ≥ 2 and higher BODE index. Higher GOLD group correlated with worse SGRQ, CAT and CES-D. Higher CES-D was associated with shorter six-minute walk distance, worse SGRQ, CAT and mMRC scores, higher GOLD group and increased COPD admissions per year. Patients with a CES-D of ≥ 16 walked shorter distances. Higher BODE quartile was associated with worse SGRQ, CAT and CES-D scores. Conclusion: Higher GOLD group and higher BODE quartile were associated with worse quality of life scores and higher depression scores. Patients in higher GOLD groups should be screened for depression. Education on COPD should be targeted at those of lower socioeconomic status.
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来源期刊
West Indian Medical Journal
West Indian Medical Journal 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
0.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal is international in scope, with author and editorial contributions from across the globe. The focus is on clinical and epidemiological aspects of tropical and infectious diseases, new and re-emerging infections, chronic non-communicable diseases, and medical conditions prevalent in the Latin America-Caribbean region, and of significance to global health, especially in developing countries. The Journal covers all medical disciplines, as well as basic and translational research elucidating the pathophysiologic basis of diseases or focussing on new therapeutic approaches, and publishes original scientific research, reviews, case reports, brief communications, letters, commentaries and medical images. The Journal publishes four to six issues and four supplements annually. English is the language of publication but Abstracts are also duplicated in Spanish. Most of the articles are submitted at the authors’ initiative, but some are solicited by the Editor-in-Chief. Unless expressly stated, the Editorial Board does not accept responsibility for authors’ opinions. All papers on submission are reviewed by a subcommittee. Those deemed worthy for review are sent to two or three reviewers (one of the three might be a statistician if necessary). The returned papers with reviewer comments are reviewed by the Editor-in-Chief. Papers may be rejected, accepted or sent back to authors for revision. Resubmitted papers from authors are reviewed by the Editor-in-Chief and may be sent back to reviewers or a final decision made by Editor-in-Chief. The decision of the Editorial Board is final with regards to rejected articles. Rejected articles will not be returned to the authors. The editorial subcommittee has the right to return sub-standard manuscripts to the authors, rather than passing them on to the reviewers. This implies outright rejection of the manuscript.
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