Affiliation:
1. Reynolds Oklahoma Center on Aging, Donald W. Reynolds Department of Geriatric Medicine, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center (OUHSC), Oklahoma City, OK
2. Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Oklahoma City, OK
3. Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, OUHSC, Oklahoma City, OK
4. General Internal Medicine Section, Department of Medicine, OUHSC, Oklahoma City, OK
Abstract
Background
This prospective, randomized, controlled clinical trial compared changes in primary outcome measures of claudication onset time (
COT
) and peak walking time (
PWT
), and secondary outcomes of submaximal exercise performance, daily ambulatory activity, vascular function, inflammation, and calf muscle hemoglobin oxygen saturation (StO
2
) in patients with symptomatic peripheral artery disease (
PAD
) following new exercise training using a step watch (
NEXT
Step) home‐exercise program, a supervised exercise program, and an attention‐control group.
Methods and Results
One hundred eighty patients were randomized. The
NEXT
Step program and the supervised exercise program consisted of intermittent walking to mild‐to‐moderate claudication pain for 12 weeks, whereas the controls performed light resistance training. Change scores for
COT
(
P
<0.001),
PWT
(
P
<0.001), 6‐minute walk distance (
P
=0.028), daily average cadence (
P
=0.011), time to minimum calf muscle StO
2
during exercise (
P
=0.025), large‐artery elasticity index (
LAEI
) (
P
=0.012), and high‐sensitivity C‐reactive protein (hs
CRP
) (
P
=0.041) were significantly different among the 3 groups. Both the
NEXT
Step home program and the supervised exercise program demonstrated a significant increase from baseline in
COT
,
PWT
, 6‐minute walk distance, daily average cadence, and time to minimum calf StO
2
. Only the
NEXT
Step home group had improvements from baseline in
LAEI
, and hs
CRP
(
P
<0.05).
Conclusions
NEXT
Step home exercise utilizing minimal staff supervision has low attrition, high adherence, and is efficacious in improving
COT
and
PWT
, as well as secondary outcomes of submaximal exercise performance, daily ambulatory activity, vascular function, inflammation, and calf muscle StO
2
in symptomatic patients with
PAD
.
Clinical Trial Registration
URL: ClinicalTrials.gov. Unique Identifier: NCT00618670.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine