Quality of life improvement after hospital- based rehabilitation or home-based physical training in intermittent claudication
Autor: | Degischer S, L. Singer, Christoph Thalhammer, Markus Aschwanden, Labs Kh, Kurt A. Jaeger, Stephan Imfeld |
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Rok vydání: | 2006 |
Předmět: |
Male
medicine.medical_specialty Ticlopidine medicine.medical_treatment Pilot Projects Rehabilitation Centers Physical medicine and rehabilitation Fibrinolytic Agents Ambulatory care Quality of life Surveys and Questionnaires Ambulatory Care medicine Humans Aged Rehabilitation business.industry Training (meteorology) Intermittent Claudication Middle Aged Clopidogrel Combined Modality Therapy Intermittent claudication Hospitalization Clinical trial Outcome and Process Assessment Health Care Exercise Test Quality of Life Physical therapy Female medicine.symptom Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine Claudication business Follow-Up Studies medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Vasa. 35:178-184 |
ISSN: | 1664-2872 0301-1526 |
DOI: | 10.1024/0301-1526.35.3.178 |
Popis: | Background: The magnitude of potential changes in Quality-of-Life (QoL) after structured institution-based or home-based peripheral arterial disease (PAD) rehabilitation programs are largely unknown at present. This pilot study provides first QoL data after PAD rehabilitation or a home-based PAD training. Patients and methods: In a non-randomized, open-label pilot study three groups of out-patients were compared: group 1 (n = 18) PAD rehabilitation; group 2 (n = 17) PAD rehabilitation + clopidogrel 75 mg once daily; group 3 (n = 20) home-based training. The training period was 3 months, which was followed by a 3-month observation phase (without prescribed training). The institution-based rehabilitation program consisted of 3 training hours per week whereas patients training at home were instructed to walk for 1 hour per day on an outdoor track. QoL assessment was performed using MOS SF-36, PAVK-86 and PAD-WIQ questionnaires. Results: At baseline background variables, demographics and claudication distances were comparable between groups. After three months of training the percentage changes for the initial and the absolute claudication distance (ICD, ACD) for groups 1, 2, and 3 amounted to 164%, 201%, 44% (ICD) and 83%, 131%, 5% (ACD), respectively. Statistically significant QoL improvements were recorded for physical functions, pain and disease related anxiety in all three study groups; statistically significant inter-group differences were not found. Conclusions: In sharp contrast to the development of the claudication distances the improvement in QoL, found after 3months of training, was comparable and not consistently different between the groups. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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