AI Article Synopsis

  • - Hypertension (HTN) is a leading cause of cardiovascular diseases, and physical exercise can help reduce its incidence and severity, with cardiac rehabilitation being essential for patients.
  • - A study compared two types of cardiac rehabilitation for hypertensive patients: one that was partly supervised at home and another that was fully supervised in rehab centers, assessing various physical and health parameters before and after the interventions.
  • - Results showed both groups improved their fitness levels, with the fully supervised group achieving greater enhancements in distance walked and oxygen consumption, indicating that supervised exercise is more effective for improving physical fitness among hypertensive individuals.

Article Abstract

Background: Hypertension (HTN) is the main cause of cardiovascular diseases accounting for one-third of global mortality. Physical exercise reduces the incidence and prevalence of HTN and cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Exercises recommended for hypertensive patients include supervised cardiac rehabilitation, which occurs in rehabilitation centers, and partly supervised rehabilitation, with the individual prescription of exercises conducted at patients' residences.

Objective: Compare clinical and functional parameters of hypertensive patients subjected to two cardiac rehabilitation protocols: supervised and partly supervised.

Method: Hypertensive patients stage I or II were randomly divided into group one (G1) (partly supervised cardiac rehabilitation) and group two (G2) (supervised cardiac rehabilitation). All patients performed a warm-up, aerobic exercise, strength training and cool-down. Participants' assessments conducted before and after intervention included: physical examination, six-minute walk test, cardiac stress test, metabolic tests, and central and peripheral blood pressure measurements.

Results: A total of 61 patients (mean age 60.3±11.3 years, 78.7% women) were randomized (30 in G1 and 31 in G2). At the end of the intervention, G1 increased 30.6 meters (p=0.004) and G2 increased 55.0 meters (p>0.001) the distance covered in the six-minute walk test. G2 showed an increase in the maximum oxygen consumption from 24.7±8.6 mlO2/Kg/min to 28.4±7.5 mlO2/Kg/min (p=0.003). Compliance with the intervention was similar in G1 and G2 (77.5±11% x 82±10%; p=0.654).

Conclusion: Participants from both groups improved their physical fitness and showed satisfactory compliance and tolerability to the interventions. The supervised exercise was more effective in improving muscle strength and some physical fitness parameters.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/1573402114666180413121016DOI Listing

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