Chronic Stroke Survivors Benefit From High-Intensity Aerobic Treadmill Exercise

Author:

Globas Christoph123,Becker Clemens2,Cerny Joachim1,Lam Judith M.13,Lindemann Ulrich2,Forrester Larry W.4,Macko Richard F.4,Luft Andreas R.1

Affiliation:

1. University Hospital of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland

2. Robert Bosch Krankenhaus, Stuttgart, Germany

3. University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany

4. University of Maryland, Baltimore, MD, USA

Abstract

Background and objective. Ambulatory subjects after stroke may benefit from gait-oriented cardiovascular fitness training, but trials to date have not primarily assessed older persons. Methods. Thirty-eight subjects (age >60 years) with residual hemiparetic gait were enrolled >6 months after stroke. Participants were randomized to receive 3 months (3×/week) progressive graded, high-intensity aerobic treadmill exercise (TAEX) or conventional care physiotherapy. Primary outcome measures were peak exercise capacity (Vo2peak) and sustained walking capacity in 6-minute walks (6MW). Secondary measures were gait velocity in 10-m walks, Berg Balance Scale, functional leg strength (5 chair-rise), self-rated mobility (Rivermead Mobility Index), and quality of life (SF-12). Results. Thirty-six participants completed the study (18 TAEX, 18 controls). TAEX but not conventional care improved Vo2peak (difference 6.4 mL/kg/min, P < .001) and 6MW (53 m, P < .001). Likewise, maximum walking speed (0.13 m/s, P = .01), balance ( P < .05), and the mental subscore of the SF-12 ( P < .01) improved more after TAEX. Gains in Vo2peak correlated with the degree at which training intensity could be progressed in the individual participant ( P < .01). Better walking was related to progression in treadmill velocity and training duration ( P < .001). Vo2peak and 6MW performances were still higher 1 year after the end of training when compared with the baseline, although endurance walking (6MW) at 1 year was lower than immediately after training ( P < .01). Conclusion. This trial demonstrates that TAEX effectively improves cardiovascular fitness and gait in persons with chronic stroke.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Medicine

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