Effect of Different Endurance Training Protocols During Cardiac Rehabilitation on Quality of Life - 26/05/21

Abstract |
Background |
This study aimed to assess the effect of different types of endurance training during outpatient cardiac rehabilitation on patients’ health-related quality of life (HRQL).
Methods |
The MacNew Heart Disease HRQL questionnaire and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale were used to assess changes in HRQL in 66 patients before and after 6 weeks of cardiac rehabilitation. Patients were randomized to 1 of 3 types of supervised endurance training: continuous endurance training, high-intensity interval training, and pyramid training. Two-way analysis of variance for repeated measure and chi-square test were used to analyze changes before and after rehabilitation.
Results |
Attendance rate during the 6 weeks of exercise training was 99.2%. Physical work capacity increased from 136.1 to 165.5 watts (+22.9%; P < .001), and there were no statistical differences between training protocols. Fully completed questionnaires at both time points were available in 46 patients (73.9%; 61.3±11.6 years, 34 males, 12 females). Regardless of the type of supervised endurance training, there was significant improvement during rehabilitation in each of the categories of the MacNew questionnaire (ie, emotion, physical, social, global; all P < .05) and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (anxiety: P = .05; depression: P = .032), without significant differences between protocols.
Conclusions |
All 3 types of endurance training led to significant and well comparable increases in physical work capacity, which was associated with an increase in HRQL independent of the type of training. Our findings support further individualization of training regimes, which could possibly lead to better compliance during life-long home-based exercise training.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Anxiety, cardiac rehabilitation, continuous exercise training, depression, high-intensity interval training, pyramid training
Plan
| Funding: MS received an unrestricted grant from the State of Salzburg. All other authors have nothing to disclose. |
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| Conflict of Interest: None. |
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| Authorship: All authors had access to the data and a role in writing this manuscript. |
Vol 134 - N° 6
P. 805-811 - juin 2021 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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