Assessment for Exercise Prescription in Heart Failure
Author(s) -
Marco Guazzi
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
cardiac failure review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2057-7559
pISSN - 2057-7540
DOI - 10.15420/cfr.2015.01.01.46
Subject(s) - heart failure , exercise prescription , medical prescription , ejection fraction , medicine , cardiology , heart rate , physical therapy , vo2 max , exercise intensity , intensive care medicine , blood pressure , pharmacology
Exercise training (ET) is a Guidelines Class 1A level of evidence adjunct therapy for heart failure (HF) with reduced ejection fraction treatment. As yet less certain is the role of ET for HF with preserved ejection fraction. Different ET types (endurance and resistance) and levels of intensity or domains (light, light-to-moderate and high-to-moderate) are used for ET programmes in patients with cardiac failure. Assessment of ET prescription can be performed through indirect (heart rate reserve) or direct metabolic measures (VO 2 reserve, ventilatory threshold) with the most precise methodology based on the analysis of VO 2 kinetics during constant work rate protocols of different workloads. The goals of assessing the effects of exercise prescription on functional capacity are traditionally represented by changes in VO 2 during peak exercise by cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET). Nonetheless, the specific evaluation of how ET may favourably affect the abnormal patterns of VO 2 linearity for work rate increase and the effects on ventilation seem important adjunctive parameters to be evaluated and monitored. Although a minority, some HF patients may not respond to ET programmes. This specific phenotype, once appropriately identified, needs a different approach and - intriguingly - should be switched to a higher ET intensity domain to yield the most comprehensive benefits from a personalised ET intervention.
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