# Exploring Dyspnea-Related Anxiety and Physical Activity in Older US Veterans With COPD

**Authors:** Brent Schell, Marilyn Moy, Jennifer Moye, Amy Silberbogen, Grace Rose, Patricia Bamonti

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.2739 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how anxiety about breathlessness affects physical activity in older veterans with COPD, finding that breathlessness severity fully explains the relationship.

## Contribution

The study is the first to examine the mediating role of dyspnea severity in the relationship between dyspnea-specific anxiety and physical activity in COPD patients.

## Key findings

- Dyspnea severity fully mediated the relationship between dyspnea-related anxiety and physical activity.
- Higher dyspnea-related anxiety was associated with lower physical activity when accounting for dyspnea severity.
- The study highlights the need for longitudinal research on dyspnea-specific anxiety and physical activity in COPD patients.

## Abstract

Dyspnea is a debilitating symptom in persons with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and has been linked to both activity restriction and psychological consequences, such as dyspnea-specific anxiety symptoms (e.g., fear of dyspnea or fear of dyspnea-inducing activities). To date, however, the association between dyspnea severity, objectively measured physical activity (PA), and dyspnea-specific anxiety symptoms has not been explored. In this study, we hypothesized that higher dyspnea-related anxiety (assessed via Breathlessness Beliefs Questionnaire-BBQ) would be associated with reduced PA (assessed via accelerometer-derived step counts), and that dyspnea severity (assessed via the University of California, San Diego Shortness of Breath Questionnaire) would mediate the relationship between dyspnea-related anxiety and PA. Forty-two Veterans were recruited (88% white, 93% male) with a mean age of 69 +/- 6 years, mean FEV1 67 +/- 21%, and mean daily step count (averaged over 14 +/- 1 days) of 4635 +/- 2115 steps. PA and BBQ scores were significantly correlated (r = -0.38, p = .014). Simple mediation analysis demonstrated a significant indirect effect of BBQ scores on PA through dyspnea severity (point estimate = -0.26, 95% CI = [-0.43, -0.11]). After accounting for indirect effects, there was no significant main effect of BBQ scores on PA (β = -0.12, p = .44), suggesting dyspnea levels completely mediated the relationship between BBQ scores and PA. Although the direction of relationship between these variables cannot be determined using cross-sectional data, this exploratory study suggests the need for longitudinal studies examining dyspnea-specific anxiety and PA in this population.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (MONDO:0005002), COPD (MONDO:0005002)

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12761265