CHEST PHYSIOTHERAPY TECHNIQUES


1. Introduction

Chest physiotherapy (CPT) comprises a group of therapeutic interventions designed to optimize respiratory function by improving ventilation, enhancing airway clearance, preventing pulmonary complications, and reducing respiratory workload. It is a cornerstone of care in critical care units, post-operative recovery, neurological rehabilitation, chronic respiratory disease management, and prolonged immobilization.

Modern chest physiotherapy is patient-specific, pathology-driven, and phase-dependent, integrating manual techniques, breathing strategies, positioning, mechanical devices, and early mobilization rather than relying solely on traditional percussion and drainage.


2. Physiological Basis of Chest Physiotherapy

Chest physiotherapy influences pulmonary function through multiple physiological mechanisms:

2.1 Airway Clearance

  • Mobilization of bronchial secretions
  • Reduction of mucus viscosity
  • Enhancement of mucociliary transport
  • Improvement in cough effectiveness

2.2 Ventilation Optimization

  • Improved alveolar ventilation
  • Re-expansion of collapsed lung units
  • Improved thoracic compliance

2.3 Gas Exchange Enhancement

  • Better ventilation–perfusion (V/Q) matching
  • Improved oxygenation
  • Reduction in hypoxemia

2.4 Work of Breathing Reduction

  • Improved respiratory muscle efficiency
  • Reduced accessory muscle overuse

Conceptual Graph: Effect of CPT on Lung Function

Pulmonary Efficiency
│
│          ██████████   After CPT
│        ████████
│      █████
│    ███
│  ██
│█
└────────────────────────── Time
        Before → After

3. Indications for Chest Physiotherapy

Clinical CategoryIndications
PulmonaryCOPD, bronchiectasis, pneumonia, cystic fibrosis
NeurologicalStroke, spinal cord injury, neuromuscular disease
SurgicalPost-abdominal, thoracic, cardiac surgery
Critical CareVentilated patients, ICU-acquired weakness
GeriatricWeak cough, secretion retention

4. Contraindications and Precautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Unstable cardiovascular status
  • Untreated pneumothorax
  • Active pulmonary hemorrhage
  • Severe hypoxemia not corrected with oxygen

Relative Contraindications

  • Rib fractures
  • Severe osteoporosis
  • Raised intracranial pressure
  • Gastroesophageal reflux disease

5. Core Chest Physiotherapy Techniques

5.1 Postural Drainage

Definition:
Therapeutic positioning to use gravity for segmental lung drainage.

Physiological Effect:

  • Enhances gravitational secretion flow
  • Improves regional lung ventilation

Clinical Notes:

  • Must be individualized
  • Not mandatory in all patients
  • Trendelenburg position used cautiously

5.2 Percussion (Clapping)

Mechanism of Action:

  • Mechanical energy loosens adherent secretions

Key Parameters Table

ParameterRecommendation
Hand positionCupped
RhythmRegular, rhythmic
Duration2–5 min/segment
TimingOften before vibration

5.3 Vibration and Shaking

Mechanism:

  • Applied during expiration
  • Increases expiratory airflow
  • Moves secretions proximally

Clinical Advantage:
Better tolerated than percussion, ideal in ICU and frail patients.


5.4 Breathing Exercises

TechniqueTherapeutic Role
Diaphragmatic breathingReduce work of breathing
Segmental breathingImprove regional ventilation
Pursed-lip breathingPrevent airway collapse
Thoracic expansionIncrease lung volumes

5.5 Huffing and Controlled Cough

Purpose:

  • Clear secretions without excessive airway collapse
  • Reduce fatigue compared to forceful coughing

6. Mechanical Chest Physiotherapy (Chest Vibrator Therapy)

6.1 Principle

  • Oscillatory mechanical forces transmitted to chest wall
  • Reduces mucus viscoelasticity
  • Improves expiratory flow bias

6.2 Device Parameters

ParameterTypical Range
Frequency10–25 Hz
IntensityLow → moderate
Duration10–20 minutes

7. Outcome Measures in Chest Physiotherapy

DomainMeasure
VentilationRespiratory rate, chest expansion
OxygenationSpO₂, ABG
Airway clearanceSputum volume
FunctionalDyspnea scales

8. Clinical Integration

Chest physiotherapy should be integrated with:

  • Early mobilization
  • Limb physiotherapy
  • Postural management
  • Respiratory muscle training

9. Clinical Pearls

  • CPT is not routine, it is indication-based
  • Breathing control precedes airway clearance
  • Positioning alone can significantly improve oxygenation
  • Over-aggressive techniques increase fatigue

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