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Featured researches published by Andrew Harver.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2012

An Official American Thoracic Society Statement: Update on the Mechanisms, Assessment, and Management of Dyspnea

Mark B. Parshall; Richard M. Schwartzstein; Lewis Adams; Robert B. Banzett; Harold L. Manning; Jean Bourbeau; Peter Calverley; Audrey Gift; Andrew Harver; Suzanne C. Lareau; Donald A. Mahler; Paula Meek; Denis E. O'Donnell

BACKGROUND Dyspnea is a common, distressing symptom of cardiopulmonary and neuromuscular diseases. Since the ATS published a consensus statement on dyspnea in 1999, there has been enormous growth in knowledge about the neurophysiology of dyspnea and increasing interest in dyspnea as a patient-reported outcome. PURPOSE The purpose of this document is to update the 1999 ATS Consensus Statement on dyspnea. METHODS An interdisciplinary committee of experts representing ATS assemblies on Nursing, Clinical Problems, Sleep and Respiratory Neurobiology, Pulmonary Rehabilitation, and Behavioral Science determined the overall scope of this update through group consensus. Focused literature reviews in key topic areas were conducted by committee members with relevant expertise. The final content of this statement was agreed upon by all members. RESULTS Progress has been made in clarifying mechanisms underlying several qualitatively and mechanistically distinct breathing sensations. Brain imaging studies have consistently shown dyspnea stimuli to be correlated with activation of cortico-limbic areas involved with interoception and nociception. Endogenous and exogenous opioids may modulate perception of dyspnea. Instruments for measuring dyspnea are often poorly characterized; a framework is proposed for more consistent identification of measurement domains. CONCLUSIONS Progress in treatment of dyspnea has not matched progress in elucidating underlying mechanisms. There is a critical need for interdisciplinary translational research to connect dyspnea mechanisms with clinical treatment and to validate dyspnea measures as patient-reported outcomes for clinical trials.


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 1988

Prediction of peak oxygen consumption in obstructive airway disease

Donald A. Mahler; Andrew Harver

The hypothesis of this study was that non-exercise variables can be used to reliably predict peak oxygen consumption (VO2) in patients with obstructive airway disease (OAD). We also evaluated the impact of symptoms on exercise capacity. Selected predictor variables included age, lung function, respiratory muscle strength, gas exchange, and the Baseline Dyspnea Index (BDI). In 40 patients peak VO2 was 19.9 +/- 8.7 (mean +/- SD) ml.kg-1.min-1 during progressive, incremental exercise until limited by symptoms on a cycle ergometer. Multiple regression analysis yielded three significant predictors: forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1), age, and BDI. Peak VO2 (ml.kg-1.min-1) = 5.5 (FEV1) - 0.3 (age) + 0.8 (BDI) + 19.3 (R2 = 0.79; SEE: 4.2 ml.kg-1.min-1). Comparisons between patients who stopped exercise because of breathlessness (N = 14) and those who stopped because of leg fatigue (N = 18) showed that lung function, inspiratory muscle strength, and peak VO2 were significantly reduced in the former group compared to the latter. Peak exercise ventilation (VE)/MVV ratio was similar in the breathless (95.3 +/- 23.8%) and leg fatigue (86.8 +/- 20.3) groups, but peak heart rate (HR)/pred. HRmax ratio was significantly higher in the leg fatigue group (86.8 +/- 12.6%) than in the breathless group (75.1 +/- 8.6%) (P = 0.006). We conclude that lung function, age, and the clinical rating of breathlessness reliably predict peak VO2 in patients with symptomatic OAD. Moreover, peak exercise performance in OAD appears to be affected by different physiological factors which may be distinguished by the major symptom limiting exercise.


Biological Psychology | 1998

Event-related potentials to inspiratory flow-resistive loads in young adults: stimulus magnitude effects

Elisabeth Bloch-Salisbury; Andrew Harver; Nancy K. Squires

Event-related potentials were recorded to brief presentations of four levels of inspiratory flow-resistive loads in young adults. We labeled the loads according to the level of resistance they provided subjectively: sub-threshold (0.34 cmH2O/l per s), near-threshold (4.01 cmH2O/l per s), intermediate (10.4cmH2O/l per s), and near-occlusion (57.5 cmH2O/l per s). No discernible ERPs were elicited by the undetected, sub-threshold stimulus but late components of the ERP (P2, N2, and P3) were observed to each of the three larger stimuli. They were related, in part, to behavioral judgments obtained during the stimulus periods. Both the latency and amplitude of the ERP components varied systematically as a function of stimulus magnitude, in a manner comparable to that observed in ERP paradigms using auditory and visual stimuli. Thus, the data show that event-related potentials to breathing are sensitive to physiologic effects of resistive loads present at the onset of inspiration. Respiratory ERPs may be used to infer sensory and perceptual responses to increases in airflow resistance and, accordingly, may relate to the perception of airflow obstruction in patient populations.


Journal of Asthma | 2006

Home monitoring in asthma self-management.

Harry Kotses; Andrew Harver; C. Thomas Humphries

Peak flow monitoring of asthma came into vogue with the advent of asthma self-management programs. Because it offered an objective way to gauge asthma severity, it promised improvement in the accuracy of asthma monitoring over that attainable by symptom monitoring. This promise has not been fulfilled. The ensuing years have witnessed a debate concerning the relative merits of symptom and peak flow monitoring. The debate has focused both on the degree to which peak flow and symptom scores are related to one another and on the relative effectiveness of symptom and peak flow monitoring for asthma control. We review research relating to these topics. The work shows that the strength of the relationship between peak flow and symptoms is low to moderate and varies between individuals and that benefits of peak flow monitoring in asthma self-management provide, at best, no more than a small increment in effectiveness beyond that afforded by symptom monitoring.


Journal of Asthma | 2009

Do asthma patients prefer to monitor symptoms or peak flow

Andrew Harver; C. Thomas Humphries; Harry Kotses

We administered a 65-item survey to patients to assess preference of symptoms and peak flow to detect worsening asthma and to collect information about asthma triggers, asthma knowledge sources, and barriers to peak flow meter use. It was completed by 139 asthma patients. Survey responses were comparable for adult and pediatric patients and for those who owned peak flow meters and those who did not. But patients who owned a peak flow meter reported more severe asthma than others. On average, the patients preferred symptoms to peak flow for assessing worsening asthma. It is likely that the preference for symptom over peak flow monitoring was effort related: Patients preferred symptom monitoring because it was the easier of the two to conduct.


Chest | 2013

Effect of increased blood levels of β-endorphin on perception of breathlessness.

Donald A. Mahler; Alex H. Gifford; Laurie A. Waterman; Joseph Ward; William J. Kraemer; Brian R. Kupchak; Andrew Harver

BACKGROUND Although opioid receptors are expressed broadly in the CNS and in peripheral sensory nerve endings including bronchioles and alveolar walls of the respiratory tract, it is unknown whether the modulatory effect of endogenous opioids on breathlessness occurs in the CNS or in the peripheral nervous system. The purpose of this investigation was to examine whether increased blood levels of β-endorphin modify breathlessness by a putative effect of binding to peripheral opioid receptors in the respiratory tract. METHODS Twenty patients with COPD (10 women and 10 men; age, 70 ± 8 years) inspired through resistances during practice sessions to identify an individualized target load that caused ratings of intensity and unpleasantness of breathlessness ≥ 50 mm on a 100-mm visual analog scale. At two interventions, blood levels of β-endorphin and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) were measured, ketoconazole (600 mg) or placebo was administered orally, and patients rated the two dimensions of breathlessness each minute during resistive load breathing (RLB). RESULTS By inhibiting cortisol synthesis, ketoconazole led to significant increases in β-endorphin (mean change, 20% ± 4%) and ACTH (mean change, 21% ± 4%) compared with placebo. The intensity and unpleasantness ratings of breathlessness and the endurance time during RLB were similar in the two interventions. CONCLUSIONS The previously demonstrated modulatory effect of endogenous opioids on breathlessness appears to be mediated by binding to receptors within the CNS rather than to peripheral opioid receptors in the respiratory tract. An alternative explanation is that the magnitude of the β-endorphin response is inadequate to affect peripheral opioid receptors. TRIAL REGISTRY ClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT01378520; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov.


Archive | 2010

Asthma, health, and society

Andrew Harver; Harry Kotses

Asthma, health, and society , Asthma, health, and society , کتابخانه دیجیتال جندی شاپور اهواز


Human Resources for Health | 2009

A model for integrating strategic planning and competence-based curriculum design in establishing a public health programme: the UNC Charlotte experience

Michael E. Thompson; Andrew Harver; Marquis Eure

IntroductionThe University of North Carolina at Charlotte, a doctoral/research-intensive university, is the largest institution of higher education in the Charlotte region. The university currently offers 18 doctoral, 62 masters and 90 baccalaureate programmes. Fall 2008 enrolment exceeded 23 300 students, including more than 4900 graduate students. The universitys Department of Health Behavior and Administration was established on 1 July 2002 as part of a transformed College of Health & Human Services.Case descriptionIn 2003, the Department initiated a series of stakeholder activities as part of its strategic planning and programmatic realignment efforts. The Department followed an empirically derived top-down/bottom-up strategic planning process that fostered community engagement and coordination of efforts across institutional levels. This process culminated in a vision to transform the unit into a Council on Education for Public Health accredited programme in public health and, eventually, an accredited school of public health. To date, the Department has revised its Master of Science in health promotion into an Master of Science in Public Health programme, renamed itself the Department of Public Health Sciences, launched a Bachelor of Science in Public Health major, laid plans for a doctoral programme, and received accreditation from the Council on Education for Public Health as a public health programme. Furthermore, the campus has endorsed the programmes growth into a school of public health as one of its priorities.Discussion and EvaluationIt is only through this rigorous and cyclical process of determining what society needs, designing a curriculum specifically to prepare graduates to meet those needs, ensuring that those graduates meet those needs, and reassessing societys needs that we can continue to advance the profession and ensure the publics health. Community stakeholders should be active contributors to programme innovation. Lessons learnt from this process include: being connected to your community and knowing its needs, being responsive to your community, remembering that process is as important as product, and preparing for success.ConclusionThe efforts reported here can be informative to other institutions by exemplifying an integrated top-down/bottom-up process of strategic planning that ensures that a departments degree programmes meet current needs and that students graduate with the competences to address those needs.


Applied Psychophysiology and Biofeedback | 1992

EMG stability as a biofeedback control.

Andrew Harver; Joyce Segreto; Harry Kotses

Factors that may confound comparisons between electromyographic (EMG) biofeedback training and its control conditions include feedback quality and experience of success. We investigated the usefulness of a control procedure designed to overcome these potential sources of confounding. The procedure consisted of training muscle tension stability. We used it as a control for frontal EMG relaxation training in children with asthma. To equate the groups for feedback quality and experience of success, we gave each child in the control condition audio feedback decreasing in pitch when muscle tension was at or near baseline levels, and feedback increasing in pitch when muscle tension was either substantially above or below baseline levels. Children in both groups were instructed to decrease the pitch of the tone. In comparison to children in the relaxation condition, the children in the control condition exhibited stable levels of muscle tension throughout eight training sessions. We concluded that feedback for stable muscle tension may be a useful control procedure for EMG biofeedback training whenever experimental and control procedures differ in either feedback quality of degree to which they permit subjects to experience success.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 2013

Effects of feedback on the perception of inspiratory resistance in children with persistent asthma: a signal detection approach.

Andrew Harver; Harry Kotses; Jennifer Ersek; Charles Thomas Humphries; William S. Ashe; Hugh R. Black

Objective Accurate perception of asthma episodes increases the likelihood that they will be managed effectively. The purpose of the study was to examine the effect of feedback in a signal detection task on perception of increased airflow obstruction in children with persistent asthma. Methods The effect of feedback training on the perception of resistive loads was evaluated in 155 children with persistent asthma between 8 and 15 years of age. Each child participated in four experimental sessions that occurred approximately once every 2 weeks, an initial session followed by three training sessions. During the initial session, the threshold resistance to breathing was determined for each child. Subsequently, each child was randomly assigned to one of two resistive load training conditions in a signal detection paradigm: training with immediate performance feedback or training with no performance feedback. Results The threshold resistance to breathing, determined in the initial session, was equivalent between groups. Children in the feedback condition discriminated more accurately between both the presence and the absence of increases in the resistance to breathing (206 [48] versus 180 [39] correct responses, p < .001), and differences over time between groups increased reliably as a function of training (165 [40] versus 145 [32] correct responses, p < .001). Response times and confidence ratings were equivalent between groups, and no differences in breathing patterns were observed between conditions. Conclusions Feedback training results in improved perception of respiratory sensations in children with asthma, a finding with implications for strategies of asthma self-management.

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Richard M. Schwartzstein

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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C. Thomas Humphries

University of North Carolina at Charlotte

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Mary Cataletto

Winthrop-University Hospital

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Dennis M. Williams

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Paula Meek

University of Colorado Denver

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Suzanne C. Lareau

University of Colorado Denver

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