Publications by authors named "Spetsioti S"

Article Synopsis
  • Post-COVID-19 syndrome affects millions, and while rehabilitation is important, studies show mixed results due to variations in participant characteristics and factors like age and disease severity that are not well understood.
  • This non-randomized case-control study involved participants with post-COVID-19 symptoms, comparing those who attended an 8-week supervised rehabilitation program to those who did not, with measurements taken at the start and after the program.
  • Results indicated that participants in rehabilitation showed significant improvements in various health metrics, including walking distance, physical performance, quality of life, and cognitive function, further highlighting the potential benefits of rehabilitation for post-COVID-19 recovery.
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Background: Patients who were infected with COVID-19 may experience Long COVID syndrome. We examined the effectiveness of physiotherapy on dyspnea, muscle strength, and functional status in Long COVID syndrome.

Methods: The exercise group underwent an 8-week supervised physiotherapeutic program consisting of interval aerobic exercise and strengthening exercises, each lasting 30 min.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examined serum levels of GFAP, s100b, and total Tau in long-COVID patients to investigate links to symptoms, cognitive decline, mental health issues, and quality of life.
  • - It included 65 long-COVID patients and 20 controls, finding that GFAP levels were higher in patients but didn’t correlate with long-COVID symptoms; other biomarkers like s100b and total Tau showed no significant difference.
  • - The research highlighted high rates of cognitive decline (65.9%), depression (32.2%), anxiety (47.5%), and PTSD (44.1%) among long-COVID patients, with most participants scoring below normal on quality of life assessments.
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Since the beginning of the pandemic, both COVID-19-associated coagulopathy biomarkers and a plethora of endothelial biomarkers have been proposed and tested as prognostic tools of severity and mortality prediction. As the pandemic is gradually being controlled, attention is now focusing on the long-term sequelae of COVID-19. In the present study, we investigated the role of endothelial activation/dysfunction in long COVID syndrome.

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Article Synopsis
  • This study explored the effectiveness of an 8-week rehabilitation program combined with usual care for COVID-19 pneumonia patients, comparing it with usual care alone.
  • The program aimed to improve respiratory symptoms, fatigue, and overall quality of life among participants seven weeks post-hospital discharge.
  • Results showed that those in the rehabilitation group had significant improvements in various health metrics, including reduced fatigue levels and enhanced physical and mental well-being.
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Long COVID-19 syndrome refers to persisting symptoms (>12 weeks) after the initial coronavirus infection and is estimated to affect 3% to 12% of people diagnosed with the disease globally. Aim: We conducted a collaborative study with the Long COVID patient organization in Greece, in order to estimate the characteristics, symptoms, and challenges these patients confront. Methods: Data were collected from 208 patients using unstructured qualitative free-text entries in an anonymized online questionnaire.

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Key Points: Exercise intolerance is common in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients. In patients with COPD, we compared an interval exercise (IE) protocol (alternating 30 s at 100% peak work rate (WR ) with 30 s at 50% WR ) with moderate-intensity constant-load exercise (CLE) at 75% WR , which yielded the same work rate. Exercise endurance time and total work output were almost twice as high for IE than CLE.

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Introduction: Impedance cardiography (IC) derived from morphological analysis of the thoracic impedance signal is now commonly used for noninvasive assessment of cardiac output (CO) at rest and during exercise. However, in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD), conflicting findings put its accuracy into question.

Objectives: We therefore compared concurrent CO measurements captured by IC (PhysioFlow: CO ) and by the indocyanine green dye dilution method (CO ) in patients with COPD.

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Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) remains grossly underutilised by suitable patients worldwide. We investigated whether home-based maintenance tele-rehabilitation will be as effective as hospital-based maintenance rehabilitation and superior to usual care in reducing the risk for acute chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) exacerbations, hospitalisations and emergency department (ED) visits.Following completion of an initial 2-month PR programme this prospective, randomised controlled trial (between December 2013 and July 2015) compared 12 months of home-based maintenance tele-rehabilitation (n=47) with 12 months of hospital-based, outpatient, maintenance rehabilitation (n=50) and also to 12 months of usual care treatment (n=50) without initial PR.

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Dynamic hyperinflation (DH) has a significant adverse effect on cardiovascular function during exercise in COPD patients. COPD patients with (n = 25) and without (n = 11) exercise-induced DH undertook an incremental (IET) and a constant-load exercise test (CLET) sustained at 75% peak work (WRpeak) prior to and following an interval cycling exercise training regime (set at 100% WRpeak with 30-s work/30-s rest intervals) lasting for 12 weeks. Cardiac output (Q) was assessed by cardio-bio-impedance (PhysioFlow, enduro, PF-O7) to determine Q mean response time (QMRT) at onset (QMRT(ON)) and offset (QMRT(OFF)) of CLET.

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Background: The aim of this work was to evaluate the effect of high-intensity interval exercise (i.e., 30s at 100% of max workload, followed by 30s at rest, 45 min 3 days/week working-out schedule for 12 weeks) on left ventricular function and aortic elastic properties among chronic heart failure (CHF) patients.

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In chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), daily physical activity is reported to be adversely associated with the magnitude of exercise-induced dynamic hyperinflation and peripheral muscle weakness. There is limited evidence whether central hemodynamic, oxygen transport, and peripheral muscle oxygenation capacities also contribute to reduced daily physical activity. Nineteen patients with COPD (FEV1, 48 ± 14% predicted) underwent a treadmill walking test at a speed corresponding to the individual patient's mean walking intensity, captured by a triaxial accelerometer during a preceding 7-day period.

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Exercise-induced dynamic hyperinflation and large intrathoracic pressure swings may compromise the normal increase in cardiac output (Q) in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD). Therefore, it is anticipated that the greater the disease severity, the greater would be the impairment in cardiac output during exercise. Eighty COPD patients (20 at each GOLD Stage) and 10 healthy age-matched individuals undertook a constant-load test on a cycle-ergometer (75% WR(peak)) and a 6min walking test (6MWT).

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In this study, we wished to determine whether the observed reduction in quadriceps muscle oxygen availability, reported during repetitive bouts of isometric exercise in simulated sailing efforts (i.e. hiking), is because of restricted muscle blood flow.

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Background: In most patients with COPD, rehabilitative exercise training partially reverses the morphologic and structural abnormalities of peripheral muscle fibers. However, whether the degree of improvement in muscle fiber morphology and typology with exercise training varies depending on disease severity remains unknown.

Methods: Forty-six clinically stable patients with COPD classified by GOLD (Global Initiative for Obstructive Lung Disease) as stage II (n = 14), III (n = 18), and IV (n = 14) completed a 10-week comprehensive pulmonary rehabilitation program consisting of high-intensity exercise three times weekly.

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Physical training is beneficial and should be included in the comprehensive management of all patients with COPD independently of disease severity. Different rehabilitative strategies and training modalities have been proposed to optimize exercise tolerance. Interval exercise training has been used as an effective alternative modality to continuous exercise in patients with moderate and severe COPD.

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The BODE index is frequently used to assess functional capacity in patients with COPD. The aim of this study was to investigate the effectiveness of interval-load training (ILT) to improve the BODE index in comparison to the commonly implemented constant-load training (CLT). Forty-two patients with COPD [FEV(1): (mean+/-SEM) 42+/-3% predicted] were randomly allocated to either ILT (n=21) or CLT (n=21).

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