Short-Term and Long-Term Effects of an Exercise-Based Patient Education Programme in People with Multiple Sclerosis: A Pilot Study.

Mult Scler Int

Faculty of Health & Social Sciences, Institute for Complex Health Research, Hochschule Fresenius, University of Applied Sciences, Limburger Straße 2, 65510 Idstein, Germany.

Published: August 2017

Although people with Multiple Sclerosis (pwMS) benefit from physical exercise, they still show reduced physical activity and exercise behaviour. This study aimed to investigate short- and long-term effects of an exercise-based patient education programme (ePEP) that focuses on empowering pwMS to a sustainable and self-regulated exercise training management. Fourteen pwMS were randomly assigned to immediate experimental group (EG-I: = 8) and waitlist-control group (EG-W: = 6) and attended biweekly in a six-week ePEP. All participants were measured for walking ability, quality of life, fatigue, and self-efficacy towards physical exercise before and after the ePEP, after 12 weeks, and one year after baseline. Short-term effects were analysed in a randomised control trial and long-term effects of all ePEP participants (EG-I + EG-W = EG-all) in a quasi-experimental design. Only functional gait significantly improved in EG-I compared to EG-W ( = 0.008, = -0.67). Moderate to large effects were found in EG-all for walking ability. Not significant, however, relevant changes were detected for quality of life and fatigue. Self-efficacy showed no changes. The ePEP seems to be a feasible option to empower pwMS to a self-regulated and sustainable exercise training management shown in long-term walking improvements.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5576429PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2017/2826532DOI Listing

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