Rehabilitation in patients with peripheral arterial disease
Details
Serval ID
serval:BIB_EB945671BC0D
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Publication sub-type
Review (review): journal as complete as possible of one specific subject, written based on exhaustive analyses from published work.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Rehabilitation in patients with peripheral arterial disease
Journal
Ann Phys Rehabil Med
ISSN
1877-0665 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
1877-0657
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/2011
Volume
54
Number
7
Pages
443-61
Language
english
Notes
Casillas, J-M
Troisgros, O
Hannequin, A
Gremeaux, V
Ader, P
Rapin, A
Laurent, Y
eng
fre
Review
Netherlands
Ann Phys Rehabil Med. 2011 Oct;54(7):443-61. doi: 10.1016/j.rehab.2011.07.001. Epub 2011 Aug 5.
Troisgros, O
Hannequin, A
Gremeaux, V
Ader, P
Rapin, A
Laurent, Y
eng
fre
Review
Netherlands
Ann Phys Rehabil Med. 2011 Oct;54(7):443-61. doi: 10.1016/j.rehab.2011.07.001. Epub 2011 Aug 5.
Abstract
Rehabilitation is a recommended first-line therapy for patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) and consists of supervised exercise training and therapeutic education. Proved benefits are significant: improve pain-free walking distance, functional status and quality of life; reduce cardiovascular risk factors and mortality. At least three sessions weekly are recommended during 3 months. Exercise conditioning (global training and lower limb resistance training) is tailored by the preliminary evaluation of walking ability (free walking test, treadmill tests, 6-min walk test) and of the cardiac tolerance (maximal effort tests). Then the exercise workload is progressively improved. The four main goals of therapeutic education are: smoking cessation, prolonged physical activity, Mediterranean diet and observing pharmacological therapies. The limited compliance of the patients with PAD is often an obstacle for educational needs. The chronic patients with important functional limitations and unchecked risk factors will be preferentially enrolled in such programs. When a revascularization is discussed, rehabilitation can serve as trial treatment. Despite its efficacy, rehabilitation is still underutilized in clinical practice and should be promoted.
Keywords
Activities of Daily Living, Cardiovascular Diseases/mortality, Depression/etiology/prevention & control, Exercise Test, Exercise Therapy, Humans, Patient Education as Topic, Peripheral Arterial Disease/physiopathology/psychology/*rehabilitation, Personality, Physical Therapy Modalities, Plaque, Atherosclerotic/physiopathology/rehabilitation, Quality of Life, Smoking Cessation
Pubmed
Create date
26/11/2019 11:35
Last modification date
06/05/2020 5:26