Vocal cord dysfunction/inducible laryngeal obstruction induced by hyperventilation in healthy individuals, people with asthma, and following coronavirus infection

Vocal cord dysfunction/inducible laryngeal obstruction (VCD/ILO) commonly co-exists with asthma and can start after viral infections. In this setting evidence suggests that dysfunctional breathing may induce the disorder but this possibility has not been researched. We therefore postulated that dysf...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Journal of asthma Vol. 62; no. 7; p. 1176
Main Authors Ruane, Laurence E, Koh, Joo, Baxter, Malcolm, Finlay, Paul, Low, Kathy, Hillman, Rachael, Ruane, Lucy, Hamilton, Garun, Leong, Paul, Bardin, Philip
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England 03.07.2025
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Summary:Vocal cord dysfunction/inducible laryngeal obstruction (VCD/ILO) commonly co-exists with asthma and can start after viral infections. In this setting evidence suggests that dysfunctional breathing may induce the disorder but this possibility has not been researched. We therefore postulated that dysfunctional breathing can induce VCD/ILO, more so in people with asthma and after viral infections. Eight healthy control subjects, 16 people with asthma and eight people who had recent COVID-19 infection (three with asthma) were recruited. Video-recorded laryngoscopy was performed at tidal breathing and during controlled hyperventilation (used as a proxy for dysfunctional breathing). VCD/ILO was diagnosed by laryngoscopy using accepted criteria and correlated with study cohorts, clinical attributes, asthma severity and spirometry. Overall, 32 subjects were studied. Hyperventilation was verified in all subjects. None of the healthy control group or people with mild asthma developed VCD/ILO during or after hyperventilation but one person with moderate/severe asthma had clear evidence of VCD/ILO. In contrast, in people who had COVID-19 infection, hyperventilation induced VCD/ILO in 3/8 people (38%). These proof-of-concept studies suggest that hyperventilation can provoke VCD/ILO in asthma and after a recent viral infection. How and why VCD/ILO develops is not known and these preliminary findings should prompt further studies of links between dysfunctional breathing, asthma, and viral infections.
ISSN:1532-4303
DOI:10.1080/02770903.2025.2463979