| Literature DB >> 33447275 |
Neeraj M Shah1,2,3, Patrick B Murphy1,2,3, Georgios Kaltsakas1,2,3.
Abstract
Many neuromuscular disorders (NMD) are complicated by respiratory failure. These patients are best managed in a multidisciplinary outpatient clinic to provide timely access to the various disciplines they require. The key mainstay of treatment of respiratory failure in patients with NMD is noninvasive ventilation, supported by secretion clearance, speech and language therapy, optimisation of nutrition and the maintenance of mobility. Patients with specific conditions may also require cardiology, neurology, orthopaedics, urology and psychological services. The respiratory NMD multidisciplinary team should also provide access to palliative care, and caregiver health and wellbeing should also be reviewed at clinical reviews. The future of care for the respiratory NMD patient will increasingly involve home services and telehealth and the clinic should be equipped and resourced to deliver these. Although not all health systems will be able to provide all elements of the multidisciplinary team discussed here, this review provides the "ideal" recipe for the adult multidisciplinary team and the evidence base underpinning this from which a clinic can be developed. EDUCATIONAL AIMS: To provide an overview of the care of an adult neuromuscular disorder patient presenting to the multidisciplinary respiratory clinic.To provide the evidence base for establishing the different elements of the multidisciplinary respiratory clinic.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33447275 PMCID: PMC7792801 DOI: 10.1183/20734735.0121-2020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breathe (Sheff) ISSN: 1810-6838
Figure 1Anatomical distribution of conditions affecting the neuromuscular system that can result in respiratory failure.
Classification of NMD that most commonly affect the respiratory system
| Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis | Duchenne muscular dystrophy | Spinal muscular atrophy |
| Limb girdle muscular dystrophy | Myotonic dystrophy | |
| Myofibrillar myopathy | Post-polio syndrome | |
| Danon disease | Facio-scapulohumeral muscular dystrophy | |
| Mitochondrial myopathies | Becker muscular dystrophy | |
| Kennedy disease | Inclusion body myositis | |
| Myasthenia gravis | McArdle disease |
Figure 2Elements of the neuromuscular respiratory MDT. The inner ring illustrates the specialities that are likely to be physically present in the neuromuscular clinic and considered core to the respiratory neuromuscular MDT, while the outer ring displays specialties that will be consulted and will reach-in to services dependent on specific disease processes.
Assessments in the adult multidisciplinary respiratory neuromuscular clinic
| Orthopnoea | |
| Immersion dyspnoea | |
| Daytime somnolence | |
| Impaired cognitive function | |
| Aspiration pneumonia | |
| Use of accessory respiratory muscles | |
| Paradoxical breathing | |
| Tachypnoea (rapid shallow breathing) | |
| Pulse oximetry | |
| Arterial/capillary blood gases | |
| Chest radiograph | |
| Spirometry (seated/supine) | |
| Slow vital capacity | |
| Peak cough flow | |
| Maximal mouth inspiratory and expiratory pressure (MIP and MEP) | |
| Sniff nasal inspiratory pressure (SNIP) | |
| Overnight pulse oximetry | |
Investigations that may provide additional information, but may not be available at all centres are listed in italics.