Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
PLoS One. 2011 Feb 9;6(2):e14669. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0014669.
Despite its efficacy and cost-effectiveness, exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation is undertaken by less than one-third of clinically eligible cardiac patients in every country for which data is available. Reasons for non-participation include the unavailability of hospital-based rehabilitation programs, or excessive travel time and distance. For this reason, there have been calls for the development of more flexible alternatives.
We developed a system to enable walking-based cardiac rehabilitation in which the patient's single-lead ECG, heart rate, GPS-based speed and location are transmitted by a programmed smartphone to a secure server for real-time monitoring by a qualified exercise scientist. The feasibility of this approach was evaluated in 134 remotely-monitored exercise assessment and exercise sessions in cardiac patients unable to undertake hospital-based rehabilitation. Completion rates, rates of technical problems, detection of ECG changes, pre- and post-intervention six minute walk test (6 MWT), cardiac depression and Quality of Life (QOL) were key measures. The system was rated as easy and quick to use. It allowed participants to complete six weeks of exercise-based rehabilitation near their homes, worksites, or when travelling. The majority of sessions were completed without any technical problems, although periodic signal loss in areas of poor coverage was an occasional limitation. Several exercise and post-exercise ECG changes were detected. Participants showed improvements comparable to those reported for hospital-based programs, walking significantly further on the post-intervention 6 MWT, 637 m (95% CI: 565-726), than on the pre-test, 524 m (95% CI: 420-655), and reporting significantly reduced levels of cardiac depression and significantly improved physical health-related QOL.
The system provided a feasible and very flexible alternative form of supervised cardiac rehabilitation for those unable to access hospital-based programs, with the potential to address a well-recognised deficiency in health care provision in many countries. Future research should assess its longer-term efficacy, cost-effectiveness and safety in larger samples representing the spectrum of cardiac morbidity and severity.
尽管运动为基础的心脏康复在每个有数据可查的国家都具有疗效和成本效益,但只有不到三分之一的符合临床条件的心脏患者接受了这种康复。不参与的原因包括医院康复计划不可用,或旅行时间和距离过长。出于这个原因,人们一直在呼吁开发更灵活的替代方案。
我们开发了一个系统,使基于步行的心脏康复成为可能,患者的单导联心电图、心率、基于 GPS 的速度和位置通过编程的智能手机传输到安全服务器,由合格的运动科学家进行实时监测。在无法进行医院康复的心脏患者中,我们对这种方法的可行性进行了 134 次远程监测运动评估和运动测试。完成率、技术问题发生率、心电图变化检测、干预前后六分钟步行测试(6MWT)、心脏抑制和生活质量(QOL)是关键指标。该系统被评为易于使用且快速。它允许参与者在离家、工作场所或旅行时完成六周的基于运动的康复。大多数测试都没有任何技术问题,但在信号覆盖较差的地区,信号偶尔会丢失。检测到一些运动和运动后心电图变化。与医院康复方案报告的结果相比,参与者表现出了可比较的改善,在干预后的 6MWT 中,参与者行走的距离明显更远,637 米(95%置信区间:565-726),而在测试前,参与者行走的距离为 524 米(95%置信区间:420-655),报告的心脏抑制程度显著降低,身体健康相关 QOL 显著提高。
该系统为无法接受医院康复计划的患者提供了一种可行且非常灵活的替代形式的监督式心脏康复,有可能解决许多国家医疗服务提供中公认的不足。未来的研究应在更大的代表心脏发病率和严重程度范围的样本中评估其长期疗效、成本效益和安全性。