Exercise Rehabilitation Improves Functional Outcomes and Peripheral Circulation in Patients with Intermittent Claudication: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Male
Time Factors
Health Status
Intermittent Claudication
Severity of Illness Index
Exercise Therapy
3. Good health
Plethysmography
03 medical and health sciences
Treatment Outcome
0302 clinical medicine
Surveys and Questionnaires
Activities of Daily Living
Blood Circulation
Exercise Test
Quality of Life
Humans
Female
Prospective Studies
Geriatric Assessment
Aged
DOI:
10.1046/j.1532-5415.2001.49152.x
Publication Date:
2002-07-26T09:56:45Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effects of a 6‐month exercise program on ambulatory function, free‐living daily physical activity, peripheral circulation, and health‐related quality of life (QOL) in disabled older patients with intermittent claudication.DESIGN: Prospective, randomized controlled trial.SETTING: University Medical Center and Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland.PARTICIPANTS: Thirty‐one of 61 patients with Fontaine stage II peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD) were randomized to exercise rehabilitation and 30 to usual‐care control. Three patients from the exercise group and six patients from the control group dropped out, leaving 28 and 24 patients, respectively, completing the study in each group.INTERVENTION: Six months of exercise rehabilitation.MEASUREMENTS: Treadmill distance walked to onset of claudication and to maximal claudication, ambulatory function, peripheral circulation, perceived QOL, and daily physical activity.RESULTS: Compliance with the exercise program was 73% of the possible sessions. Exercise rehabilitation increased treadmill distance walked to onset of claudication by 134% (P < .001) and to maximal claudication by 77% (P < .001), walking economy by 12% (P = .003), 6‐minute walk distance by 12% (P < .001), and maximal calf blood flow by 30% (P < .001). Changes in distance walked to maximal pain correlated with changes in walking economy (r = −.50, P = .013) and changes in maximal calf blood flow (r = .38, P = .047). Exercise rehabilitation increased accelerometer‐derived daily physical activity by 38% (P < .001); this change correlated with the change in distance walked to maximal pain (r = .45, P = .020). These improvements were significantly better than the changes in the control group (P < .05).CONCLUSION: Improvements in claudication following exercise rehabilitation in older PAOD patients are dependent on improvements in peripheral circulation and walking economy. Improvement in treadmill claudication distances in these patients translated into increased accelerometer‐derived physical activity in the community, which enabled the patients to become more functionally independent. J Am Geriatr Soc 49:755–762, 2001.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (42)
CITATIONS (195)
EXTERNAL LINKS
PlumX Metrics
RECOMMENDATIONS
FAIR ASSESSMENT
Coming soon ....
JUPYTER LAB
Coming soon ....