AI Article Synopsis

  • Exercise is recommended for patients recovering from acute type A aortic dissection (ATAAD) to improve physical fitness, but determining a safe exercise blood pressure (BP) threshold post-surgery remains unclear.
  • Research indicates that regular moderate-intensity aerobic exercise can support cardiac health, with some patients able to tolerate higher exercise systolic BP (above 160 mm Hg) without negative effects, suggesting exercise intensity may be underestimated.
  • The review concludes that a combination of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise and low-intensity resistance training is suitable for post-ATAAD rehabilitation, emphasizing the importance of personalizing exercise plans to maintain "safe" BP limits for high-risk patients.

Article Abstract

(1) Background: Exercise is recommended to improve physical fitness in patients recovering from acute type A aortic dissection (ATAAD). However, surgery corrects the diseased blood vessels and reduces the risk of ATAAD, but it does not redefine a safe exercise blood pressure (BP) threshold. This review aimed to discuss whether the safe threshold of exercise BP can be upregulated after ATAAD surgery to increase exercise intensity with additional benefits. (2) Data sources: The PubMed databases were searched with the keywords "type A acute aortic dissection surgery", "exercise", "BP", "stress", and variations of these terms. (3) Study selection: Data from clinical trials, guidelines, and recent reviews were selected for review. (4) Results: Regular exercise can be considered a cardioprotective intervention for aortic dissection patients by attenuating hemodynamic responses at rest and during exercise. Previous studies have mainly focused on moderate-intensity aerobic exercise. In practice, the exercise systolic BP of some patients was higher than 160 mm Hg without adverse events, which indicates that the training intensity may be underestimated for patients after ATAAD surgery. Limited studies suggest a light-to-moderate resistance training for selected patients because it may cause a greater increase in BP. (5) Conclusions: Moderate-intensity continuous aerobic exercise supplemented by low-intensity resistance training is appropriate for cardiac rehabilitation after ATAAD surgery. The BP increase based on the normal exercise BP response, corresponding to the moderate-intensity is relatively safe. For high-risk post-ATAAD patients, considering the overall volume of training, personalizing the exercise regimen to remain within "safe" BP limits, and avoiding excessive fluctuations in BP should be the primary considerations for exercise training.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9146528PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm11102931DOI Listing

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