Chest physiotherapy


Chest physiotherapy are treatments generally performed by physical therapists and respiratory therapists, whereby breathing is improved by the indirect removal of mucus from the breathing passages of a patient. Other terms, include respiratory or cardio-thoracic physiotherapy.
CPT are treatments which are performed on people suffering from mucus dysfunction in respiratory disease conditions like asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, bronchitis, bronchiectasis and cystic fibrosis. With these respiratory conditions, they all have a common requirement of chest physiotherapy to assist the mucus clearance due to defects with mucociliary clearance.
Techniques include chest percussion using clapping: the therapist lightly claps the patient's chest, back, and area under the arms. Percussion, while effective in the treatment of infants and children, is no longer used in adults due to the introduction of more effective and self-management focused treatments. These include oscillating positive expiratory pressure devices or OPEP devices like the use of "Flutter", "Aerobika", "AirPhysio", "Pari O-PEP" or Positive Expiratory Pressure PEP devices like the "Acapella" and PEP masks or devices as well as specific exercise regimes. The exercises prescribed can include specific respiratory exercises e.g. autogenic drainage, as well as general cardiovascular exercises that assist the body to remove sputum and improve the efficiency of oxygen uptake in muscles.
There is no strong evidence to recommend chest physiotherapy as a routine treatment for adults who have pneumonia.
See also