Department of Physical Therapy, College of Allied Health Sciences, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, 930 Madison Ave, 6th Floor, Memphis, TN 38163, USA.
Phys Ther. 2010 Apr;90(4):509-26. doi: 10.2522/ptj.20080202. Epub 2010 Mar 4.
People with bleeding disorders may develop severe arthritis due to joint hemorrhages. Exercise is recommended for people with bleeding disorders, but guidelines are vague and few studies document efficacy. In this study, 65% of people with bleeding disorders surveyed reported participating in minimal exercise, and 50% indicated a fear of exercise-induced bleeding, pain, or physical impairment.
The purpose of this study was to examine the feasibility, safety, and efficacy of a professionally designed, individualized, supervised exercise program for people with bleeding disorders.
A single-group, pretest-posttest clinical design was used.
Thirty-three patients (3 female, 30 male; 7-57 years of age) with mild to severe bleeding disorders were enrolled in the study. Twelve patients had co-existing illnesses, including HIV/AIDS, hepatitis, diabetes, fibromyalgia, neurofibromatosis, osteopenia, osteogenesis imperfecta, or cancer. Pre- and post-program measures included upper- and lower-extremity strength (force-generating capacity), joint range of motion, joint and extremity circumference, and distance walked in 6 minutes. Each patient was prescribed a 6-week, twice-weekly, individualized, supervised exercise program. Twenty participants (61%) completed the program.
Pre- and post-program data were analyzed by paired t tests for all participants who completed the program. No exercise-induced injuries, pain, edema, or bleeding episodes were reported. Significant improvements occurred in joint motion, strength, and distance walked in 6 minutes, with no change in joint circumference. The greatest gains were among the individuals with the most severe joint damage and coexisting illness.
Limitations included a small sample size with concomitant disease, which is common to the population, and a nonblinded examiner.
A professionally designed and supervised, individualized exercise program is feasible, safe, and beneficial for people with bleeding disorders, even in the presence of concomitant disease. A longitudinal study with a larger sample size, a blinded examiner, and a control group is needed to confirm the results.
患有出血性疾病的人可能会因关节出血而患上严重的关节炎。建议患有出血性疾病的人进行运动,但指南不明确,很少有研究记录其疗效。在这项研究中,接受调查的出血性疾病患者中有 65%报告参加了最少的运动,而 50%表示担心运动引起的出血、疼痛或身体损伤。
本研究旨在检查专门设计的、个体化的、监督性运动方案对出血性疾病患者的可行性、安全性和疗效。
采用单组、前后测试的临床设计。
33 名患者(3 名女性,30 名男性;年龄 7-57 岁)患有轻度至重度出血性疾病。12 名患者患有并存疾病,包括 HIV/AIDS、肝炎、糖尿病、纤维肌痛、神经纤维瘤病、骨质疏松症、成骨不全症或癌症。在方案开始前和结束后测量上下肢力量(产生力量的能力)、关节活动范围、关节和肢体周长以及 6 分钟步行距离。为每位患者制定了 6 周、每周两次、个体化、监督性的运动方案。20 名参与者(61%)完成了该方案。
完成方案的所有参与者的前后数据均采用配对 t 检验进行分析。没有报告运动引起的损伤、疼痛、肿胀或出血事件。关节运动、力量和 6 分钟步行距离显著改善,关节周长无变化。关节损伤最严重和合并疾病最多的个体获益最大。
局限性包括伴有合并疾病的患者样本量小,这在该人群中很常见,以及检查者未设盲。
专门设计和监督的个体化运动方案对出血性疾病患者是可行的、安全的且有益的,即使存在合并疾病也是如此。需要进行一项具有更大样本量、设盲检查者和对照组的纵向研究来确认结果。