Breathing Exercise and Invasive Pain at Hemodialysis Patients
- Conditions
- Arteriovenous FistulaBreathing ExercisePain
- Interventions
- Other: Breathing Exercise
- Registration Number
- NCT05252377
- Lead Sponsor
- Istanbul Demiroglu Bilim University
- Brief Summary
Non-pharmacological approaches applied in the prevention of invasive pain due to cannulation in patients treated with arteriovenous fistula and hemodialysis; It is also a cost-effective method that prevents the patient from feeling pain from the application. Breathing exercises are a method that can be easily applied before the cannulation procedure. Although it is seen that there are limited number of studies on the subject in the literature, it was observed that the duration of breathing exercise application was short (two weeks) in one study and the duration was not specified in the other.
- Detailed Description
An average of 312 cannulations per year is performed in a patient who is treated for chronic hemodialysis and has arteriovenous fistula. Patients state that they experience moderate to severe pain at a rate of 57-60.9% when accessing the arteriovenous. In cases where access to the fistula cannot be achieved at one time, patients may experience pain due to; patients experience non-compliance with dialysis treatment and their quality of life is adversely affected. This situation causes an increase in the mortality rate, especially with cardiovascular and respiratory system complications. In recent years, breathing exercise, which is one of the methods of distraction, has been used to reduce the invasive pain experienced during blood collection and cannulation procedures. By increasing lung ventilation with breathing, the amount of oxygen entering the body is maximized, and this causes relaxation in the patient. This relaxation also causes the person to relax and reduce the pain they will feel. Although studies have found that breathing exercise is effective in reducing invasive pain; No information was given about the exercise method and duration. Although in practice, holding the patient's breath during venipuncture and performing the cannulation procedure while giving it is a method frequently applied by the nurse, no study with high evidence supporting the situation has been found in the literature.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 100
- Hemodialysis treatment with arteriovenous for at least 3 months
- Hemodialysis treatment is applied for 3 days and 4 hours a week.
- Between the ages of 18-65
- Pain score ≥ 2 as assessed by Visual Analogue Scale during cannulation of the arteriovenous fistula
- Absence of advanced heart failure, asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- Able to communicate in Turkish
- Not having any psychiatric disorder that prevents communication
- Agreeing to participate in the research
- Inability to do breathing exercises properly
- Presence of infection, edema and scar tissue in the area where the arteriovenous fistula is located
- Using pain medication before hemodialysis treatment
- Two or more cannulation attempts for arteriovenous fistula in the same session
- Presence of neuropathy and peripheral vascular disease
- Pregnancy
- Withdrawal from the study at any stage of the research
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Breathing Exercise Group Breathing Exercise Breathing exercise program; It was prepared by the researchers in accordance with the literature and based on the studies in which breathing exercise was applied to reduce invasive pain experienced during cannulation, blood collection and postoperative pain. Patients will be given an exercise based on rhythmic breathing. The exercise will be started before the cannulation application, the patient will be told to perform the breathing exercise twice, and he will be asked to continue doing the breathing exercise until the cannulation process is completed. The patient will wait by taking five normal breaths between each breathing exercise. The patient will be told that he can count by using his fingers in the steps he is asked to count up to three.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change From Baseline Invasive Pain at 12 Dialysis Session At the end of the every dialysis session during one month (3 hemodialysis sessions are done every week)] It will be assessed total 12 times at the end of the dialysis session with Visual Analogue. Pain intensity measured on a Visual Analog Scale with scores ranging from 0 - 10. Pain increases as the score increases. The high point describes bad outcome.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Demiroglu Bilim University
🇹🇷Istanbul, Turkey