Publications by authors named "Patricia F Trevizan"

Objective: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of heel rise test (HRT) for assessing the functional capacity (FC) of individuals with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and determine the best sensitivity cutoff point to stratify individuals with worse FC.

Methods: This retrospective methodological study included adults of both sexes diagnosed with PAD and intermittent claudication. Individuals performed the HRT (number of plantar flexions, execution time, and execution rate were recorded) and the incremental shuttle walking test (distance walked was recorded).

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  • - The study aims to determine if adding lifestyle education to a physical exercise program improves various health outcomes for individuals with prediabetes or diabetes compared to exercise alone, focusing on areas like functional capacity, disease knowledge, and quality of life.
  • - It is a multicenter, double-blinded, randomized controlled trial lasting 12 weeks, followed by a 6-month assessment, involving adults who meet specific health criteria and are recruited from two Brazilian cities.
  • - Outcomes being measured include improvements in health behaviors, cardiometabolic health parameters, depression, and diet quality, alongside the primary outcomes of functional capacity and disease-related knowledge.
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  • This study investigates the information needs of cardiac patients using the Information Needs in Cardiac Rehabilitation short version (INCR-S) scale across different global regions.
  • It involved 1,601 patients from 19 countries and found that while knowledge of cardiac health topics was rated highly important, knowledge sufficiency varied significantly, especially between high- and middle-income countries.
  • The INCR-S scale proved to be a valid and reliable tool, revealing crucial gaps in patients’ knowledge regarding topics like medications, nutrition, and support resources.
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  • Ultramarathon running impacts heart function, with this study analyzing how a single stage affects cardiac performance.
  • The review included 17 studies, showing reductions in key measurements of cardiac function, particularly for the left ventricle after ultramarathons.
  • Results indicate immediate impairment in both the heart's pumping ability and relaxation after the race, although certain measurements did not show significant changes.
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  • Cardiac rehabilitation programs are not widely used, especially among women, prompting a study on the barriers they face across different world regions and how these barriers differ based on enrollment status.* -
  • The study involved over 2,160 patients from 16 countries, revealing that while women's barriers were not significantly higher overall, they were greater in specific regions, particularly due to a lack of awareness about cardiac rehabilitation.* -
  • Key barriers for nonenrolled women included lack of knowledge and program contact, while enrolled women struggled with distance and family responsibilities, indicating the need for tailored support strategies to address these issues, especially for unemployed women.*
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Background: Exercise training improves physical capacity in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), but the mechanisms involved in this response is not fully understood. The aim of this study was to determine if physical capacity increase in patients HFrEF is associated with muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) reduction and muscle blood flow (MBF) increase.

Methods: The study included 124 patients from a 17-year database, divided according to exercise training status: 1) exercise-trained (ET, n = 83) and 2) untrained (UNT, n = 41).

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  • Autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) patients experience deteriorating cardiac autonomic control during their hospital stay, particularly after high-dose chemotherapy, which is linked to increased mortality risks.
  • A study compared cardiac autonomic control in HSCT patients with cancer-free outpatients and found significant declines in various cardiac metrics during hospitalization, especially at discharge.
  • Results indicated that impaired cardiac autonomic control in HSCT patients correlates with early signs of cardiotoxicity, highlighting the need for monitoring cardiac health during treatment.
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Purpose: To investigate the effect of inspiratory muscle training (IMT) in addition to conventional physical rehabilitation on muscle strength, functional capacity, mobility, hemodynamics, fatigue, and quality of life in hospitalized patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT).

Methods: We conducted a randomized controlled trial in 57 inpatients with hematological diseases undergoing HSCT. Conventional inpatient physical rehabilitation was delivered to the IMT (n = 27) and control (CON; n = 30) groups according to usual care, and the first group additionally performed IMT.

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This cross-sectional study evaluated the perception of individuals with prediabetes/diabetes about their living conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic to identify the facilitators, barriers, and reasons to remain physically active at home and adhere to recommended exercise. It included individuals with prediabetes/diabetes who had completed an exercise intervention, which started on-site and moved to a remote home-based regime due to the COVID-19 pandemic and were advised to keep exercising at home. The outcomes were assessed by a bespoke questionnaire that was developed by the research team, the Brazilian Portuguese adapted version of the Exercise Adherence Rating scale, and the Motives for Physical Activity Measure-Revised scale.

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Background: Liver cirrhosis (LC) causes several musculoskeletal changes.

Objective: To test the hypothesis that the peripheral and inspiratory muscle endurance are reduced in patients with liver cirrhosis.

Methods: Twenty-one patients with LC (LC group; 61±14 years) and 18 age-matched subjects (control group; 56±17 years) had accepted to participate in this cross-sectional observational study.

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Sympathetic hyperactivation and baroreflex dysfunction are hallmarks of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). However, it is unknown whether the progressive loss of phasic activity of sympathetic nerve bursts is associated with baroreflex dysfunction in HFrEF patients. Therefore, we investigated the association between the oscillatory pattern of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (LF/HF) and the gain and coupling of the sympathetic baroreflex function in HFrEF patients.

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Aims: We tested the hypothesis that the effects of combined inspiratory muscle training and aerobic exercise training (IMT + AET) on muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) and forearm blood flow in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction are more pronounced than the effects of AET alone.

Methods And Results: Patients aged 30-70 years, New York Heart Association Functional Class II-III, and left ventricular ejection fraction ≤40% were randomly assigned to four groups: IMT (n = 11), AET (n = 12), IMT + AET (n = 9), and non-training (NT; n = 10). MSNA was recorded using microneurography.

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Background: The DiAbeTes Education Questionnaire (DATE-Q) is a self-administered tool developed to evaluate disease-related knowledge and to assess knowledge of five core components of rehabilitation programs: physical exercise, diet, psychosocial well-being, disease self-management, and complications.

Objective: To translate and cross-culturally adapt into Brazilian Portuguese, and to test the psychometric properties of the DATE-Q for its use in Brazil.

Methods: The process of translation and cross-cultural adaptation consisted of five steps: translation into Brazilian Portuguese, synthesis of translation, back translation, expert committee, and pilot test of pre-final version.

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  • The study focuses on the management of diabetes through various methods, emphasizing the need for patients to stick to lifestyle changes, particularly exercise, due to low adherence rates among them.
  • The research evaluates the psychometric properties of the Brazilian Portuguese version of Bandura's Exercise Self-Efficacy Scale (BESES) by testing its reliability and validity among diabetes patients, involving initial pilot testing and a larger sample for comprehensive analysis.
  • Results indicated that the BESES demonstrated strong internal consistency and test-retest reliability, with active patients scoring higher in self-efficacy compared to sedentary ones, confirming its validity for assessing exercise self-efficacy in Brazilian diabetes patients.
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Purpose: Chemotherapy treatment can lead to cardiovascular toxicity and physical impairment prior to autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (auto-HSCT). Cardiovascular adjustments during exercise and the exercise capacity remain unknown in patients prior to auto-HSCT. Thus, the hemodynamic responses during exercise and exercise capacity were evaluated using a novel effort test in patients prior to auto-HSCT.

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Purpose: Patients undergoing hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) usually experienced respiratory muscle weakness. Inspiratory muscle training (IMT) at HSCT has not been studied yet. Thus, it is important to evaluate the safety, feasibility, and preliminary effectiveness of IMT for hospitalized patients undergoing HSCT with an unstable and acute clinical condition.

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Background: The exercise intolerance in chronic heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) is mostly attributed to alterations in skeletal muscle. However, the mechanisms underlying the skeletal myopathy in patients with HFrEF are not completely understood. We hypothesized that (i) aerobic exercise training (AET) and inspiratory muscle training (IMT) would change skeletal muscle microRNA-1 expression and downstream-associated pathways in patients with HFrEF and (ii) AET and IMT would increase leg blood flow (LBF), functional capacity, and quality of life in these patients.

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Background: Inspiratory muscle training (IMT) has been widely applied to different populations, including the general population of older adults. In addition to increasing inspiratory muscle strength, other benefits of IMT in the health of this population have been reported. The primary aim of this study was to review the effects of IMT on the general parameters of health (eg, respiratory, functional, physical, and other variables) in older adults (≥ 60 y), and the secondary aim was to analyze the main IMT protocol used in the studies.

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Central factors negatively affect the functional capacity of Fontan patients (FP), but "non-cardiac" factors, such as pulmonary function, may contribute to their exercise intolerance. We studied the pulmonary function in asymptomatic FP and its correlations with their functional capacity. Pulmonary function and cardiopulmonary exercise tests were performed in a prospective study of 27 FP and 27 healthy controls (HC).

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Background: Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) is common in patients with heart failure (HF), and hypoxia and hypercapnia episodes activate chemoreceptors stimulating autonomic reflex responses. We tested the hypothesis that muscle vasoconstriction and muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in response to hypoxia and hypercapnia would be more pronounced in patients with HF and SDB than in patients with HF without SDB (NoSBD).

Methods And Results: Ninety consecutive patients with HF, New York Heart Association functional class II-III, and left ventricular ejection fraction ≤40% were screened for the study.

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Background Exercise training improves neurovascular control and functional capacity in heart failure (HF) patients. However, the influence of the aetiology on these benefits is unknown. We compared the effects of exercise training on neurovascular control and functional capacity in idiopathic, ischaemic and hypertensive HF patients.

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Impairment of (inspiratory and expiratory) respiratory muscles is a common clinical finding, not only in patients with neuromuscular disease but also in patients with primary disease of the lung parenchyma or airways. Although such impairment is common, its recognition is usually delayed because its signs and symptoms are nonspecific and late. This delayed recognition, or even the lack thereof, occurs because the diagnostic tests used in the assessment of respiratory muscle strength are not widely known and available.

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Arterial baroreflex control of muscle sympathetic nerve activity (ABRMSNA) is impaired in chronic systolic heart failure (CHF). The purpose of the study was to test the hypothesis that exercise training would improve the gain and reduce the time delay of ABRMSNA in CHF patients. Twenty-six CHF patients, New York Heart Association Functional Class II-III, EF ≤ 40%, peak V̇o2 ≤ 20 ml·kg(-1)·min(-1) were divided into two groups: untrained (UT, n = 13, 57 ± 3 years) and exercise trained (ET, n = 13, 49 ± 3 years).

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Background: Obesity can affect the cardiac autonomic modulation, blood lipid levels and the physical capacity.

Objective: To study the effect of obesity on the heart rate variability (HRV), blood lipid levels and physical capacity of obese children.

Methods: Thirty children aged 9 to 11 years were studied, divided in two groups: a) 15 obese children (O) aged 10.

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