The MN RIDE pilot: feasibility of a synchronous, remotely delivered, aerobic exercise training program for rural-dwelling adults with subjective cognitive decline.

IF 2 4区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Rural and remote health Pub Date : 2023-12-01 Epub Date: 2023-12-12 DOI:10.22605/RRH8351
Dereck L Salisbury, Wayne Warry, Joshua Fergen, Kirsten Cruikshank, Patricia D Soderlund, Kristen Jacklin
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Out of all the modifiable risk factors for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD), physical inactivity is the strongest. Rural residents have an increased risk for dementia and face significant barriers to accessing ADRD information, caregiving support, and memory-related services, which contributes to substandard care. Rural communities have greater barriers to participating in physical activity, and in particular exercise, due to lack of social support, travel/weather problems, and lack of facilities/equipment. The purpose of this pilot study was to implement and evaluate the feasibility and safety of a synchronous, remotely delivered, aerobic exercise (AEx) telerehabilitation program in persons with subjective cognitive decline (SCD) living in rural areas.

Methods: The Minnesota Rehabilitation Intervention for Dementia Evasion for rural residents (MN RIDE) pilot study was one of five pilot studies conducted through the Center for Community Engaged Rural Dementia and Alzheimer's Research, conducted in collaboration with the Memory Keepers Medical Discovery Team. The Memory Keepers Medical Discovery Team employs a community-based participatory research model and uses a community advisory group, community-based researchers and a rural community engagement specialist to ensure research studies are aligned with rural community needs and to facilitate the recruitment of participants living in rural northern Minnesota. The MN RIDE study employed a single group, pretest-post-test design to test the feasibility and safety of an AEx-focused synchronous telerehabilitation program in rural-living middle-aged or older adults (>45 years) with SCD (indicated by answering yes to both, 'Do you perceive memory or cognitive difficulties?' and 'In the last two years, has your cognition or memory declined?'). All 36 AEx sessions (conducted over 12 weeks) were supervised remotely via smart devices and Zoom. The AEx program was classified as moderate intensity stationary cycling starting at a rating of perceived exertion (RPE) 11-12 or for 30-35 minutes in session 1, and was alternatively increased by 1-point RPE or 5-minute increments as tolerated up to RPE 12-14 for 50 minutes a session over time (by session 18). Secondarily, moderate intensity was defined as achieving an exercise heart rate of 64-76% of age-predicted maximum heart rate (HRmax). Feasibility and safety outcomes were assessed by session attendance, intensity adherence, presence of adverse events, and participant satisfaction.

Results: The average age of the study sample (n=9) was 57.44±7.16 years (average age of SCD onset 53.44±7.47 years) with 14.00±5.57 years of education and 88.9% female. All patients completed the study, resulting in a dropout rate of 0%. Out of the possible 324 sessions scheduled, 276 were attended (85% session adherence). Average intensity metrics achieved over the AEx sessions were RPE 13.2±0.5 and HRmax 72.0±7.9%, which both represent of moderate intensity AEx metrics. No adverse events were reported.

Conclusion: This pilot study further provides the first evidence of preliminary feasibility of synchronous audiovisual, telerehabilitation programs delivered to rural residents at risk for ADRD. Thus, exercise telerehabilitation programs that focus on AEx could be viable and useful tools to overcome situations with limited access to healthcare services such as in rural communities. Further controlled studies with greater sample size could help further expand our results.

明尼苏达州 RIDE 试点项目:针对主观认知能力下降的农村成年人的同步远程有氧运动训练计划的可行性。
简介在阿尔茨海默病和相关痴呆症(ADRD)的所有可改变风险因素中,缺乏运动是最主要的风险因素。农村居民罹患痴呆症的风险更高,他们在获取阿兹海默症及相关痴呆症信息、护理支持和记忆相关服务方面面临着巨大障碍,这也是导致护理不达标的原因之一。由于缺乏社会支持、旅行/天气问题以及缺乏设施/设备,农村社区在参加体育活动,尤其是锻炼方面面临着更大的障碍。这项试点研究的目的是在居住在农村地区的主观认知能力下降(SCD)患者中实施并评估同步远程有氧运动(AEx)远程康复计划的可行性和安全性:明尼苏达州农村居民痴呆症回避康复干预试点研究(MN RIDE)是社区参与农村痴呆症和阿尔茨海默氏症研究中心(Center for Community Engaged Rural Dementia and Alzheimer's Research)与记忆守护者医疗探索小组(Memory Keepers Medical Discovery Team)合作开展的五项试点研究之一。记忆守护者医学探索小组采用社区参与式研究模式,并利用社区咨询小组、社区研究人员和农村社区参与专家来确保研究符合农村社区的需求,并为招募居住在明尼苏达州北部农村地区的参与者提供便利。明尼苏达州 RIDE 研究采用了单组、前测-后测设计,以测试在农村居住的患有 SCD 的中老年人(大于 45 岁)中开展的以 AEx 为重点的同步远程康复计划的可行性和安全性(对 "您是否感觉到记忆或认知困难 "和 "在过去两年中,您的认知或记忆力是否下降?)所有 36 节 AEx 课程(为期 12 周)均通过智能设备和 Zoom 进行远程监督。AEx 计划被归类为中等强度的固定自行车运动,在第 1 次疗程中,感知用力值(RPE)为 11-12 或 30-35 分钟,然后根据耐受情况以 1 点 RPE 或 5 分钟为单位增加,直至 RPE 为 12-14,每次疗程 50 分钟(到第 18 次疗程为止)。其次,中等强度是指运动心率达到年龄预测最大心率(HRmax)的 64-76%。可行性和安全性的评估是通过课程出勤率、强度坚持率、不良事件发生率和参与者满意度来实现的:研究样本(n=9)的平均年龄为 57.44+7.16 岁(SCD 发病平均年龄为 53.44+7.47 岁),受教育年限为 14.00+5.57 年,88.9% 为女性。所有患者均完成了研究,辍学率为 0%。在可能安排的 324 个疗程中,276 人参加了疗程(85% 的疗程坚持率)。AEx课程达到的平均强度指标为RPE 13.2±0.5和HRmax 72.0±7.9%,均代表中等强度的AEx指标。无不良事件报告:这项试点研究进一步证明了向有 ADRD 风险的农村居民提供同步视听远程康复项目的初步可行性。因此,以AEx为重点的运动远程康复项目可以成为克服农村社区等医疗服务有限的情况的可行且有用的工具。进一步开展样本量更大的对照研究有助于进一步扩大我们的研究结果。
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来源期刊
Rural and remote health
Rural and remote health Rural Health-
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
9.50%
发文量
145
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: Rural and Remote Health is a not-for-profit, online-only, peer-reviewed academic publication. It aims to further rural and remote health education, research and practice. The primary purpose of the Journal is to publish and so provide an international knowledge-base of peer-reviewed material from rural health practitioners (medical, nursing and allied health professionals and health workers), educators, researchers and policy makers.
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