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A pilot study to assess the effects of preventing fluid retention in the legs by wearing compression stockings on overnight airway narrowing in mild asthma.

Sleep & Breathing 2024 Februrary 18
PURPOSE: Nocturnal asthma is a sign of asthma worsening and could be partially due to more fluid drawn into the thorax during sleep by gravitational force and/or pharyngeal collapse in those with obstructive sleep apnea. Wearing compression stockings during the day reduces fluid shift from the legs to the neck overnight. However, the potential effect of wearing compression stockings to reduce fluid accumulation in the leg and to improve nocturnal small airway narrowing in patients with asthma has not been investigated. This study investigates whether reducing leg fluid volume by wearing compression stockings during the day would attenuate small airway narrowing in patients with asthma before and after sleep.

METHODS: We enrolled 11 participants with asthma. All participants underwent overnight polysomnography with or without wearing compression stockings for 2 weeks. Before and after sleep, leg fluid volume (LFV) was measured by bioelectrical impedance, and airway narrowing was primarily assessed by respiratory system resistance and reactance at 5 Hz (R5 and X5 respectively) using oscillometry.

RESULTS: After 2 weeks of wearing compression stockings, the LFV measured in the evening was reduced (∆ =  - 192.6 ± 248.3 ml, p = 0.02), and R5 and X5 improved (∆ =  - 0.7 ± 0.9 cmH2 O/L/s, p = 0.03 and 0.2 ± 1.4 cmH2 O/L/s, p = 0.05 respectively). No changes were observed in the morning.

CONCLUSIONS: Preventing fluid retention in the legs by wearing compression stockings for 2 weeks during the day, reduced LFV and airway narrowing in the evening in all participants with asthma, but not in the morning after sleep.

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