short burst oxygen therapy
Last reviewed 01/2018
Short burst oxygen therapy
- refers to the intermittent use of supplemental oxygen at home usually for periods of about 10 to 20 minutes at a time to relieve dyspnoea
- it is important to differentiate short burst therapy from the provision of continuous oxygen with exercise and termed ambulatory oxygen therapy
-
short burst oxygen therapy has traditionally been used for:
- pre-oxygenation before exercise
- breathlessness during recovery from exercise
- control of breathlessness at rest
- used in palliative care
- used after an exacerbation of COPD to bridge the time to full LTOT assessment
- short
burst oxygen should be considered for episodic breathlessness, not relieved by
other treatments in patients with the following conditions:
- severe COPD
- interstitial lung disease
- heart failure
- palliative care
- short burst oxygen should only be prescribed if an improvement in breathlessness and/or exercise tolerance can be documented (1)
- assessment
for short burst oxygen therapy
- no specific methodology has been developed for assessment of short burst therapy
- other causes of breathlessness must be excluded and patients should be assessed for LTOT if appropriate
Reference:
- British Thoracic Society (January 2006). Report on Clinical Component for the Home Oxygen Service in England and Wales.
long term oxygen therapy (LTOT)