Impact of respiratory muscle-stretching exercise on chest expansion and shoulder mobility post-thoracotomy: a randomized controlled trial
Saikaew Chuachan, Rerknapat Jitmana, Umpira Promsri, Pattiyaporn Thongdaeng, Nimit Kosura, Voravit Chittithavorn

TL;DR
This study found that adding respiratory muscle-stretching exercises to standard care after chest surgery did not significantly improve recovery compared to standard care alone.
Contribution
The study evaluates the effectiveness of respiratory muscle-stretching exercises as an adjunct to conventional therapy after thoracotomy.
Findings
Both groups showed significant within-group improvements in chest expansion, lung volume, and shoulder mobility.
Respiratory muscle-stretching exercises did not provide significantly greater benefits than conventional therapy alone.
The intervention was found to be feasible and safe as an adjunct to standard care.
Abstract
Thoracotomy often causes respiratory muscle injury, reduced chest wall expansion, decreased lung volume, and limited shoulder range of motion (ROM). Respiratory muscle-stretching exercises (RMSE) have been proposed to enhance chest expansion and facilitate recovery. This aimed to compare the effects of RMSE combined with conventional physical therapy versus conventional therapy alone in patients undergoing elective thoracotomy. A single-center randomized controlled trial was conducted at Songklanagarind Hospital, Thailand, between August 2013 and December 2019. Twenty-eight patients scheduled for elective thoracotomy were recruited, and 23 (mean age 47.1 ± 15.2 years; 18 males, 5 females) completed the trials. Participants were randomized to an intervention group (RMSE plus conventional therapy, n = 12) or a control group (conventional therapy only, n = 11). RMSE consisted of four…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMyofascial pain diagnosis and treatment · Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) Research · Sports injuries and prevention
