Exercise-Based Telerehabilitation for Heart Failure Patients Declining Outpatient Rehabilitation - A Randomized Controlled Trial.

IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q1 SPORT SCIENCES
Kari Margrethe Lundgren, Knut Asbjørn Rise Langlo, Øyvind Salvesen, Nils Petter Aspvik, Rune Mo, Øyvind Ellingsen, Elisabeth Vesterbekkmo, Paolo Zanaboni, Håvard Dalen, Inger-Lise Aamot Aksetøy
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Abstract

Abstract: Purpose: Cardiac rehabilitation participation rates are low despite strong recommendations, and many chronic heart failure patients remain physically inactive. Rural living, long travel distance, costs, age, and frailty might be factors explaining this. To increase cardiac rehabilitation uptake, we designed an exercise-based randomized controlled telerehabilitation trial enabling chronic heart failure patients unable or unwilling to participate in outpatient cardiac rehabilitation to exercise at home. Aim was to evaluate the long-term effects of telerehabilitation on physical activity levels.Methods and results: CHF patients (n = 61) with reduced (≤40%), mildly reduced (41-49%), or preserved ejection fraction (≥50%) were randomized (1:1) to telerehabilitation (n = 31) with an initial 3-month group-based high-intensity exercise telerehabilitation program or control (n = 30), with regular follow-up visits over a 2-year period. All participants attended a "Living with heart failure" course. Outcomes were measures of physical activity, peak oxygen uptake, 6-minute walk test distance, quality of life, morbidity, and mortality. We found no significant differences between groups for long-term changes in moderate to vigorous activity (MVPA) or peak oxygen uptake from baseline to the 2-year follow-up. Nor quality of life differed between groups, but both groups had significant within-group improvements in score on the Minnesota living with heart failure questionnaire (p = 0.000) and improvement in EQ-5D VAS score was significant (p = 0.05) in the telerehabilitation group.Conclusions: Telerehabilitation performed as home-based real-time high-intensity exercise sessions provided by videoconferencing for participants unable or unwilling to participate in standard outpatient cardiac rehabilitation did not affect long-term physical activity levels or physical capacity as expected. Still, a positive effect on health-related quality of life was seen in both groups.

对放弃门诊康复治疗的心衰患者进行基于运动的远程康复治疗--随机对照试验。
摘要:目的:尽管有强烈的建议,但心脏康复的参与率却很低,许多慢性心力衰竭患者仍然缺乏运动。农村生活、路途遥远、费用、年龄和体弱可能是造成这种情况的原因。为了提高心脏康复的参与率,我们设计了一项以运动为基础的随机对照远程康复试验,让无法或不愿参加门诊心脏康复的慢性心力衰竭患者在家进行运动。目的是评估远程康复对体育锻炼水平的长期影响:射血分数减低(≤40%)、轻度减低(41-49%)或保留(≥50%)的慢性心力衰竭患者(n = 61)被随机(1:1)分配到远程康复(n = 31)和对照组(n = 30),前者接受为期 3 个月的小组高强度运动远程康复项目,后者接受为期 2 年的定期随访。所有参与者都参加了 "与心力衰竭共存 "课程。研究结果包括运动量、峰值摄氧量、6 分钟步行测试距离、生活质量、发病率和死亡率。我们发现,从基线到两年随访期间,各组在中度到剧烈运动(MVPA)或峰值摄氧量的长期变化方面没有明显差异。各组之间的生活质量也不尽相同,但两组在明尼苏达心力衰竭患者生活问卷上的得分都有显著的组内改善(p = 0.000),远程康复组的 EQ-5D VAS 得分有显著改善(p = 0.05):通过视频会议为无法或不愿参加标准门诊心脏康复治疗的参与者提供基于家庭的实时高强度锻炼课程的远程康复治疗并未如预期的那样影响长期体力活动水平或体能。不过,两组参与者的健康相关生活质量都有积极影响。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
4.90%
发文量
2568
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise® features original investigations, clinical studies, and comprehensive reviews on current topics in sports medicine and exercise science. With this leading multidisciplinary journal, exercise physiologists, physiatrists, physical therapists, team physicians, and athletic trainers get a vital exchange of information from basic and applied science, medicine, education, and allied health fields.
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