Journal article
A randomised controlled trial of supplemental oxygen versus medical air during exercise training in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: Supplemental oxygen in pulmonary rehabilitation trial (SuppORT) (Protocol)
JA Alison, ZJ McKeough, SC Jenkins, AE Holland, K Hill, NR Morris, RWM Leung, KA Williamson, LM Spencer, CJ Hill, AL Lee, H Seale, N Cecins, CF McDonald
BMC Pulmonary Medicine | Published : 2016
Abstract
Background: Oxygen desaturation during exercise is common in people with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). The aim of the study is to determine, in people with COPD who desaturate during exercise, whether supplemental oxygen during an eight-week exercise training program is more effective than medical air (sham intervention) in improving exercise capacity and health-related quality of life both at the completion of training and at six-month follow up. Methods/Design: This is a multi-centre randomised controlled trial with concealed allocation, blinding of participants, exercise trainers and assessors, and intention-to-treat analysis. 110 people with chronic obstructive pulmonary ..
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Awarded by National Science Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge the National Health and Medical Research Council Australia for funding this study (Project Grant APP1019989).