The 6-Minute Walk Test: DIFFERENCE IN EXPLANATORY VARIABLES FOR PERFORMANCE BY COMMUNITY-DWELLING OLDER ADULTS AND PATIENTS HOSPITALIZED FOR CARDIAC DISEASE.

J Cardiopulm Rehabil Prev

Program in Physical and Occupational Therapy (Dr Kamiya and Mr Adachi) and Department of Health Sciences (Dr Yamada), Nagoya University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, Japan (Dr Kamiya and Mr Adachi); Department of Hygiene and Public Health, Osaka Medical College, Takatsuki, Japan (Dr Kamiya); Departments of Rehabilitation (Dr Kono) and Cardiology (Dr Izawa), Fujita Health University Banbuntane Hotokukai Hospital, Toyoake, Japan; and Departments of Rehabilitation (Mr Shibata) and Cardiovascular Surgery (Dr Kitamura), Nagoya Heart Center, Nagoya, Japan.

Published: September 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the usual walking speed of participants affects the distance they can walk in six minutes, specifically focusing on cardiac patients and older adults living in the community.
  • Data was collected from 119 hospitalized cardiac patients and 109 older adults, analyzing factors like walking speed and physical health metrics to identify correlations.
  • Results showed that walking speed was a stronger predictor of six-minute walk distances in hospitalized cardiac patients compared to community-dwelling older adults, suggesting the need for further research on walking speed’s implications for health outcomes in cardiac patients.

Article Abstract

Purpose: To examine the use of 10-m usual walking speed as an explanatory variable of the 6-min walk test distance (6MWD) in cardiac patients and community-dwelling older adults.

Methods: This was a cross-sectional secondary analysis correlational study. Participants of the present study were 119 patients hospitalized for cardiac disease and 109 community-dwelling older adults. Data including 6MWD, 10-m usual walking speed, age, sex, grip strength, height, weight, and cognitive function were obtained from the medical records of patients in 2 acute care hospitals and a cohort of community-dwelling Japanese older adults. Multiple linear regression models for the 6MWD were examined in each group.

Results: The mean ± standard deviation for 6MWDs were 276 ± 106 m in hospitalized patients and 466 ± 81 m in community-dwelling older adults. In both groups, 10-m usual walking speed was the strongest factor correlated with 6MWD. On univariate analysis, the correlation between walking tests was stronger in the hospitalized group (β = .855) than in the community-dwelling elderly (β = .627). When age and sex were added into the models, the determination coefficients improved (adjusted R = 0.745 and 0.463 in the hospitalized patients and the community-dwelling elderly, respectively).

Conclusions: The present findings indicated that the 6MWD was more strongly associated with 10-m usual walking speed in patients hospitalized for cardiac disease than in community-dwelling older adults. The predictive validity of 10-m walking speed for future adverse outcomes among cardiac patients is an issue for future research.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/HCR.0000000000000417DOI Listing

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