Publications by authors named "Anselm Egun"

Background: Peripheral artery disease affects over 236 million people globally and the classic symptom is intermittent claudication (IC) which is associated with reduction in physical activity. The evidence that supervised exercise programmes (SEPs) improve pain-free and maximal walking distance is irrefutable. However, adherence rates are low with exercise-related pain cited as a contributing factor.

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Background: Current guidelines for intermittent claudication advocate exercise at moderate to maximal claudication pain. However, adherence rates to supervised exercise programmes (SEP) remain poor and claudication pain is a contributing factor. Limited evidence suggests that moderate or pain-free exercise may be just as beneficial and may be better tolerated.

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Purpose: The degree of ischemia during intermittent claudication is difficult to quantify. We evaluated calf muscle ischemia during exercise in patients with claudication with near infrared spectroscopy.

Methods: A Critikon Cerebral Redox Model 2001 (Johnson & Johnson Medical, Newport, Gwent, United Kingdom) was used to measure calf muscle deoxygenated hemoglobin (HHb), oxygenated hemoglobin (O(2)Hb), and total hemoglobin levels and oxygenation index (HbD; HbD = O(2)Hb - HHb) in 16 patients with claudication and in 14 control subjects before, during, and after walking on a treadmill for 1 minute (submaximal exercise).

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Synopsis of recent research by authors named "Anselm Egun"

  • - Anselm Egun's recent research primarily focuses on the challenges of prescribing exercise in patients with intermittent claudication, particularly regarding the management of claudication pain during physical activity.
  • - His work indicates a significant inconsistency within existing guidelines on the acceptable levels of claudication pain for exercise prescription, highlighting that moderate or pain-free exercise might improve adherence rates compared to current recommendations that advocate for higher pain thresholds.
  • - Egun's findings emphasize the need for tailored approaches in exercise prescription for patients with peripheral artery disease to enhance walking performance and patient compliance, as evidenced by systematic reviews and ongoing clinical trials.