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Treadmill
Exercise improves Walking Endurance for
patients With PAD
Newswise — Patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD),
which can include symptoms such as pain in
the legs, who participated in supervised
treadmill exercise improved their walking
endurance and quality of life, according to
a study in the January 14 issue of JAMA.
The treadmill exercise also improved walking performance
for PAD patients without the classic
symptoms of pain in the leg muscles.
Lower extremity PAD (a condition that develops when the
arteries that supply blood to the legs
become completely or partially blocked as a
result of plaque build-up) affects 1 in 16
U.S. adults 40 years or older.
Men and women with PAD have greater functional impairment
and more rapid rates of functional decline
than those who do not have PAD, according to
background information in the article.
Most patients with PAD do not have symptoms of intermittent
claudication (pain in the leg muscles that
comes and goes), but PAD patients without
these symptoms have greater functional
impairment and functional decline than those
without PAD.
No prior exercise interventions have been tested on PAD
participants with and without symptoms of
intermittent claudication.
Additionally, benefits of lower extremity resistance
(strength) training for PAD patients are
unclear.
Mary M. McDermott, M.D., of the Northwestern University
Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, and
colleagues conducted a study to determine
whether supervised treadmill exercise and
lower extremity-resistance training improves
functional performance and other outcomes
among participants with PAD with and without
intermittent claudication symptoms.
The randomized controlled clinical trial included 156
patients with PAD who were randomly assigned
to supervised treadmill exercise, to lower
extremity resistance training, or to a
control group, for six months.
Patients were tested for six-minute walk performance and a
short physical performance battery, as well
as brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (a
measurement of change in the diameter of an
artery in the arm), treadmill walking
performance, the Walking Impairment
Questionnaire, and the 36-Item Short Form
Health Survey physical functioning (SF-36
PF) score.
For the 6-minute walk, those in the supervised treadmill
exercise group increased their distance from
baseline by an average of about 69 feet vs.
those in the control group, whose distance
decreased from baseline by an average of 49
feet, for an average increase of 118 feet
between groups.
Participants in the resistance training group increased
their distance walked by 41 feet compared
with the control group.
Those in the lower extremity resistance training group did
not experience change in their 6-minute walk
performance compared with the control group.
There were no differences in change in short physical
performance battery score between the
treadmill exercise and control groups or
between the resistance training and the
control groups at the 6-month follow-up.
Participants in the treadmill exercise group had more
favorable changes in brachial arterial
flow-mediated dilation than the control
group, whereas changes among participants in
the resistance training group were not
different from the control group.
Those in the treadmill exercise and the resistance training
groups each had significantly greater
increases in average maximum treadmill
walking time at the 6-month follow-up than
the control group.
The treadmill exercise group had significantly greater
average improvement in their SF-36 physical
functioning score and in their walking
impairment distance score than the control
group.
The resistance training group had greater average
improvement in their SF-36 physical
functioning score and in their walking
impairment distance and stair climbing
scores than the control group.
“Based on findings reported in this trial, physicians
should recommend supervised treadmill
exercise programs for PAD patients,
regardless of whether they have classic
symptoms of intermittent claudication,” the
authors conclude.
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