Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8651586 | The American Journal of Cardiology | 2018 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Exercise capacity is a strong predictor of survival rate in patients with and without coronary artery disease. Exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation (CR) with improvements in the peak oxygen uptake (VO2peak) of 3.5âml/kg/min or more has been shown to be beneficial in earlier observational studies. Long-term results on VO2peak after CR are rare. The aim of this study was to assess if a 12-week outpatient CR program including high-intensity interval training would preserve or improve VO2peak 15 months after CR entry. A total of 133 coronary patients attended the CR program (the Norwegian Ullevaal model). At baseline, at the end of the program, and after 15 months, the patients were evaluated with a cardiopulmonary exercise test, body mass index, blood pressure, self-reported exercise habits, and quality of life (the COOP-WONCA questionnaire). Long-term outcomes were available for 86 patients (65 %). The mean age was 57â±â9 years and 87% were men. VO2peak improved significantly from baseline (31.9â±â7.6âml/kg/min) to program end (35.9â±â8.6âml/kg/min) (pâ<0.001), and further progress was seen at the long-term follow-up (36.8â±â9.2âml/kg/min) (pâ<0.05). COOP-WONCA was significantly enhanced in all domains (pâ<0.001) with a meaningful clinical improvement in “physical fitness” from baseline to long-term follow-up. In conclusion, at follow-up, the patients still exercised (mean 2.5â±â1 times per week) and had improved or preserved their VO2peak and quality of life.
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Authors
Birgitta Blakstad PhD, Pernille MSc, Haakon Kiil PhD, Inger PhD,