The Effect of Physiotherapy on Dyspnea, Muscle Strength and Functional Status in Patients with Long COVID Syndrome

Author:

Michalas Michail1,Katsaras Stefanos1,Spetsioti Stavroula2ORCID,Spaggoulakis Dimitrios2,Antonoglou Archontoula2,Asimakos Andreas2ORCID,Katsaounou Paraskevi2ORCID,Christakou Anna3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physiotherapy, School of Health Sciences, University of Peloponnese, 23100 Sparta, Greece

2. First Department of Critical Care Medicine, Evangelismos Hospital, Medical School, National & Kapodistrian University of Athens, 10676 Athens, Greece

3. Department Physiotherapy, Lab Biomechanics, School of Health Sciences, University of Peloponnese, 23100 Sparta, Greece

Abstract

Background: Patients who were infected with COVID-19 may experience Long COVID syndrome. We examined the effectiveness of physiotherapy on dyspnea, muscle strength, and functional status in Long COVID syndrome. Methods: The exercise group underwent an 8-week supervised physiotherapeutic program consisting of interval aerobic exercise and strengthening exercises, each lasting 30 min. The control group did not engage in any exercise. Dyspnea, muscle strength, and functional status were assessed at the beginning and end of the intervention in both groups. Results: No significant baseline differences were found between the two groups. The exercise group demonstrated improvements compared to baseline in dyspnea, quadriceps muscle strength, and functional status. Specifically, there was a significant increase of 3.7 lifts in the 60-s sit-to-stand test (p = 0.01), an increase of 5.86 kg in right quadriceps muscle strength (p = 0.03), an increase of 8.26 kg in left quadriceps muscle strength (p = 0.01), and a decrease in dyspnea score by 0.95 points (p = 0.02). Conclusions: Similar studies have reported improvements in dyspnea, muscle strength, and functional status in the exercise group. However, further research with larger sample sizes is needed to confirm these findings.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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