Institute of Cardiovascular Research and Sport Medicine, German Sport University Cologne, Am Sportpark Müngersdorf 6, 50933, Cologne, Germany,
Sports Med. 2014 Sep;44(9):1289-304. doi: 10.1007/s40279-014-0207-5.
Peripheral neuropathies (PNPs) encompass a large group of disorders of heterogeneous origin which can manifest themselves with sensory and/or motor deficits depending on the predominantly affected nerve fiber modality. It represents a highly prevalent disease group which can be associated with significant disability and poor recovery. Exercise has the potential to improve side effects of PNP.
Our objective in this systematic review was to analyze exercise interventions for neuropathic patients in order to evaluate the possible benefits of exercise.
Three independent reviewers used PubMed, MEDPILOT (MEDLINE), Cochrane, and relevant reference lists to obtain the data. Relevant studies were graded according to the Oxford Levels of Evidence.
Eighteen studies (ten randomized controlled trials and eight controlled clinical trials) met all inclusion criteria. Three (diabetic) studies were ranked very high quality [1b (A)], nine high quality (four diabetes, one cancer, four others) [2b (B)], while six (four diabetes, two others) showed low quality (4/C). Current data suggests that exercise is a feasible, safe, and promising supportive measure for neuropathic patients. This is best documented for patients with diabetic peripheral neuropathy (DPN), suggesting that endurance training has the potential to prevent the onset of and reduce the progression of DPN. In general, balance exercises showed the highest effect on the motor as well as sensory symptoms in all types of PNP.
Overall, balance training appears to be the most effective exercise intervention. Studies focusing exclusively on strength, or a combination of endurance and strength, appear to have a lower impact. For metabolically-induced neuropathies, endurance training also plays an important role. Further research with high methodological quality needs to be conducted in order to establish evidence-based clinical recommendations for neuropathic patients.
周围神经病变(PNP)包括一大类来源不同的疾病,这些疾病可能表现为感觉和/或运动功能障碍,具体取决于主要受累的神经纤维类型。它是一种高发疾病,可导致显著的残疾和预后不良。运动有可能改善 PNP 的副作用。
我们在这项系统评价中的目的是分析针对神经病变患者的运动干预措施,以评估运动的可能益处。
三位独立评审员使用 PubMed、MEDPILOT(MEDLINE)、Cochrane 和相关参考文献列表来获取数据。相关研究根据牛津证据等级进行分级。
18 项研究(10 项随机对照试验和 8 项对照临床试验)符合所有纳入标准。三项(糖尿病)研究被评为极高质量[1b(A)],九项高质量(四项糖尿病、一项癌症、四项其他)[2b(B)],而六项(四项糖尿病、两项其他)显示低质量(4/C)。目前的数据表明,运动是一种可行、安全且有前途的神经病变患者辅助治疗方法。这在糖尿病周围神经病变(DPN)患者中得到了最好的证明,表明耐力训练有可能预防 DPN 的发生和减缓其进展。一般来说,平衡训练对所有类型的 PNP 的运动和感觉症状都有最大的影响。
总的来说,平衡训练似乎是最有效的运动干预措施。专门针对力量或耐力和力量相结合的研究似乎影响较小。对于代谢性神经病变,耐力训练也起着重要作用。需要进行更高方法学质量的研究,以便为神经病变患者制定基于证据的临床建议。