Irish Daily Mail

Learning to breathe properly can help overcome Long Covid

- By THEA JOURDAN

WHEN Rebecca Hales caught Covid she could barely draw breath. The one-time marathon runner was left gasping as she lay in bed in July 2021.

Recovery was painfully slow — shaking off her high temperatur­e and sore throat took mavvny weeks, and her breathing problems persisted.

‘I was panting at the slightest exertion,’ says Rebecca, 55, a community nurse who lives with her husband Richard, 56.

But it wasn’t until January that the problem was identified: she was diagnosed with breathing pattern disorder (BPD), essentiall­y chronic breathless­ness caused by an abnormal breathing pattern.

While BPD commonly affects those with chronic lung conditions such as asthma or chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disorder (such as emphysema), or people with anxiety disorders, it is also emerging as a major post-infection problem for many Covid sufferers.

Rebecca’s diagnosis came after her GP referred her to a Long Covid clinic. She says by that point she thought she was unlikely ‘ever to be able to breathe easily again — I never thought I’d get back to the fit, healthy person I’d been before Covid’.

BPD is when someone develops an abnormal respirator­y pattern (usually faster, shallower breath), says Emma Tucker, a respirator­y physiother­apist who treated Rebecca.

She adds: ‘But while being breathless can be part of an acute or shortterm condition, with BPD it is chronic. Sufferers complain of feeling airhungry and breathless.

‘This breathing pattern can become habitual — in some people, levels of carbon dioxide in the bloodstrea­m fall because when you hyperventi­late, you breathe out more carbon dioxide than usual, leading to fainting and dizzy spells.’

Emma says the number of patients she is seeing with BPD as part of long Covid are ‘really significan­t and continuing to rise’. Since opening in May 2020 the clinic has treated 4,000 adults, of whom nearly a quarter had BPD.

An estimated 114,000 people in Ireland have Covid symptoms lasting more than four weeks after initial infection; and some will continue to have symptoms such as breathless­ness, fatigue and brain fog after one year.

EMMA says most report the same symptoms — feeling they can’t get enough air, frequent yawning, and pins and needles in the hands, feet and chest, which can be caused by a lack of carbon dioxide.

‘Being breathless all the time, even when you’re resting, speaking or even eating, is incredibly scary,’ says Emma.

But although BPD and long Covid are clearly linked, it’s not yet clear how.

Unlike COPD patients, who have changes in their lungs which will affect the way they breathe, people with BPD linked to long Covid have no physical signs that anything is amiss.

‘Lung function tests and chest X-rays can draw a blank; they’re normal,’ adds Emma, co-author of the Long Covid Self-Help Guide. Despite severe problems breathing, ‘their oxygen saturation levels, the percentage of oxygen in the blood, are normal, too’.

One theory is the Covid virus causes the body’s autonomic nervous system (controllin­g our fight or flight response, as well as our heart rate and breathing) to go haywire, leading to a faster and shallower rate of breathing.

Another possibilit­y is that it could be caused by vagus nerve dysfunctio­n in long Covid patients, explains Dr Mark Faghy, associate professor in respirator­y and exercise physiology.

The vagus nerve, running from the brain to the large intestine, controls signals between the brain and organs, and supports the parasympat­hetic nervous system (controllin­g the body’s ability to relax).

‘Essentiall­y, the feedback from the body to the brain becomes scrambled and the signals do not match what is being experience­d by the body,’ says Dr Faghy. Factors such as pain, stress and anxiety can all trigger BPD, and poor posture — which alters the position of the diaphragm, making it harder to breathe correctly — can also contribute.

The underlying causes are not entirely understood, but it is clear BPD ‘can be a profoundly distressin­g condition and some patients we see are desperate’, says Dr Faghy.

Whatever the trigger, a person with BPD typically breathes faster than they should, using the chest and neck muscles rather than the belly and diaphragm, explains Rebecca Livingston­e, a specialist respirator­y physiother­apist at a post-Covid service.

‘Normal breathing should be much slower, with relatively little air volume changing in the lungs and only small movement in the tummy.’

Treatment includes managing symptoms by examining ways to improve breathing, posture and speech.

The most important technique to learn is efficient breathing, ensuring that most of the work is being done by the stomach and not the chest, says Emma Tucker.

REBECCA Livingston­e adds: ‘We show people what a normal breathing pattern should look like and get them to put their hands on their tummy to see where the diaphragm should work. The important thing is we can help fix the problem.’

Rebecca Hales found the virtual workshops she attended helped her to retrain her breathing pattern sufficient­ly to return to her job as a nursery nurse.

‘I still have long Covid but my breathing is back to normal and I’m less tired,’ she says.

She has even started running again — at a measured pace. ‘I’ve signed up for a Couch to 5K, and I hope to reach that milestone in the not-too-distant future,’ she says.

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