Abstract

ObjectiveHead-down training can affect behavioural and neurocognitive control while performing dual tasks (DT). Breathing training improves motor and cognitive performance in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). As a neurorehabilitation tool, functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) has been demonstrated to be an effective method for detecting changes in brain activation during motor recovery, as well as monitoring patients' long-term progress during DT in motor and cognitive performance. However, no studies have examined the combined effect of head-down position and breathing exercises on motor and cognitive performance during DT. This study will employ a novel intervention involving head-down strong abdominal breathing training to investigate its effects on motor and cognitive performance during DT in patients with COPD aiming to inform future training modalities in the community and at home. MethodsWe will recruit participants from Anqing, China, through community announcements, bulletin board postings, WeChat, and offline visits and screen 72 patients with stable COPD, classified as Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) I-II, by pulmonologists at the university hospital. All participants will be randomly assigned to the head-down strong abdominal breathing (tilt angle 0–30° on the inversion apparatus, respiratory rate 20–30 breaths/min), head-down training, and strong abdominal breathing training groups in a 1:1:1 ratio. The intervention will last 12 weeks, with sessions performed thrice weekly for 1 h. ResultsThe primary outcomes will be motor-cognitive DT time, dual-task effects, correct responses to cognitive tasks, and gait characteristics assessed at baseline, 6 and 12 weeks of intervention. The patient’s dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (PFC) will also be stimulated with fNIRS at wavelengths of 730 and 850 nm, with a sampling rate of 11 Hz, to record oxy-haemoglobin (oxy-Hb), deoxy-haemoglobin (deoxy-Hb), and total oxyhaemoglobin (total-Hb). Secondary outcomes will include pre- and post-intervention scales for dyspnoea, overall cognitive function, balance, and anxiety and depression. ConclusionAlterations in the PFC involved in attentional control, planning, and decision-making may partially explain cognitive and motor deficits (such as impaired balance and slower walking speed) in patients with COPD. This study may help to understand the effects of head-down strong abdominal breathing training on cognitive and motor performance under DT in patients with COPD and compare it with head-down training and breathing training alone. It may also help to determine whether it is a simple and effective form of exercise at home and in the community.

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