Chan Weili, Immink Maarten A, Hillier Susan
University of South Australia, Adelaide.
Altern Ther Health Med. 2012 May-Jun;18(3):34-43.
Mood disorders are prevalent in people after stroke, and a disorder's onset can exacerbate stroke-related disabilities. While evidence supports the mental-health benefits of participation in exercise and yoga, it is unknown whether such benefits extend to a population with poststroke hemiparesis.
The study investigated whether supplementing exercise with participation in a yoga program would provide further improvements in self-reported symptoms of depression and anxiety in a chronic poststroke population, and it also assessed trial feasibility for future studies.
The research team designed a randomized, controlled pilot trial that included an exercise-only group (EX, control) and a yoga-and-exercise group (YEX, intervention).
The study took place at the Centre for Physical Activity in Ageing an exercise rehabilitation and activity center at the Royal Adelaide Hospital in South Australia.
The participants included 14 individuals with chronic poststroke hemiparesis: eight in the intervention group and six in the control group.
The YEX group participated in a 6-week standardized program that included yoga in weekly group sessions and home practice in addition to exercise in a weekly group class. The EX group participated only in the group exercise class weekly for 6 weeks.
The research team assessed self-reported symptoms of depression using the Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS15) and symptoms of anxiety and negative affect using the State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI). The team based the feasibility evaluation on recruitment outcomes, retention of participants, participants' compliance with the intervention program, and the safety of the intervention.
Changes in depression and state and trait anxiety did not significantly differ between intervention groups (GDS15 P=.749, STAI-Y1, P=.595, STAI-Y2, P=.407). Comparison of individuals' case results indicated clinically relevant improvements in both groups, although members of the intervention group had greater improvements. Participants reported no adverse events, and the study experienced high retention of participants and high compliance in the yoga program.
This pilot study provides preliminary data on the effects of yoga combined with exercise to influence mood poststroke. It is a feasible, safe, and acceptable intervention, and the field requires additional investigations with a larger sample size.
情绪障碍在中风患者中很常见,而障碍的发作会加重与中风相关的残疾。虽然有证据支持参与运动和瑜伽对心理健康有益,但尚不清楚这些益处是否适用于中风后偏瘫人群。
该研究调查了在慢性中风人群中,在运动基础上增加瑜伽项目参与是否能进一步改善自我报告的抑郁和焦虑症状,同时还评估了该试验对未来研究的可行性。
研究团队设计了一项随机对照试验,包括仅运动组(EX,对照组)和瑜伽与运动组(YEX,干预组)。
该研究在南澳大利亚皇家阿德莱德医院的老年体育活动中心——一个运动康复和活动中心进行。
参与者包括14名慢性中风后偏瘫患者:干预组8名,对照组6名。
YEX组参加了一个为期6周的标准化项目,该项目包括每周小组课程中的瑜伽以及家庭练习,此外还有每周一次的小组运动课程。EX组仅每周参加一次小组运动课程,为期6周。
研究团队使用老年抑郁量表(GDS15)评估自我报告的抑郁症状,使用状态特质焦虑量表(STAI)评估焦虑和消极情绪症状。该团队基于招募结果、参与者留存率、参与者对干预项目的依从性以及干预的安全性进行可行性评估。
干预组之间抑郁、状态和特质焦虑的变化无显著差异(GDS15 P = 0.749,STAI - Y1,P = 0.595,STAI - Y2,P = 0.407)。个体病例结果的比较表明两组在临床上均有相关改善,尽管干预组成员的改善更大。参与者报告无不良事件,该研究的参与者留存率高,且瑜伽项目的依从性高。
这项初步研究提供了关于瑜伽与运动相结合对中风后情绪影响的初步数据。这是一种可行、安全且可接受的干预措施,该领域需要更大样本量的进一步研究。